Sequential and Comparative Evaluation of Pain Treatment Effectiveness Response
NCT ID: NCT04142177
Last Updated: 2025-05-16
Study Results
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Basic Information
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RECRUITING
NA
2529 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2022-06-13
2027-12-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Using a sequential randomized, pragmatic, 2-step comparative effectiveness study design, the main goal is to identify the optimal approach to cLBP treatment employing commonly recommended non-surgical, non-pharmacological options. Options for treatment in this trial were selected based on the VA's stepped-care model for the treatment of chronic pain, availability of treatments, controversies in current clinical practice, and the surveyed preferences of both Veterans with cLBP and VA healthcare providers. The implementation of study results has been kept closely in mind, and stakeholder input has been incorporated.
The first step compares continued care and active monitoring arm (CCAM) to internet-based pain self-management (Pain EASE) and an enhanced physical therapy intervention that combines Pain EASE with tailored exercise and physical activity. The utility of tailored exercise requiring physical therapist guidance added to internet-based self-management has not been examined. A CCAM arm is included in this step to definitively assess the effectiveness of these initial treatment options. Patients failing to achieve clinically significant reductions in pain interference (a functional outcome) in Step 1 and those desiring additional treatment will be randomized in Step 2 to yoga, spinal manipulation therapy (SMT), or therapist-delivered cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). These options appear in consensus guidelines although little information is available to help patients and providers select the most effective option. Each option has a distinct theoretical basis for effectiveness with yoga described as a mind-body therapy, SMT as a technique to adjust the structural relationships of the spine, and CBT as a psychological or behavioral approach. While the literature suggests approximate clinical equipoise between these treatments, costs, side effects, access to specific options and patient/provider acceptance may differ significantly. Participants proceeding to randomization in Step 2 will be allowed to exclude up to one of the three Step 2 treatments based on their preferences.
The investigators' primary hypothesis corresponding to the first treatment step is that an enhanced physical therapy intervention that combines pain self-management education with a tailored exercise program will reduce pain interference greater than internet-based pain self-management alone or CCAM in Veterans with cLBP. For the second step, the study has been powered to detect clinically meaningful pairwise differences among the three treatments. The primary outcome is change in pain interference at 3 months, measured using the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) pain interference subscale. This is a widely accepted functional outcome in musculoskeletal pain trials and emphasizes an endpoint important to patients, providers and healthcare management systems. Study participants will be followed for one year after initiation of their final study treatments to assess the durability of treatment effects.
The investigators will leverage the power of this large study and maximize its impact by incorporating additional outcome measures as recommended by the Initiative on Methods, Measurement, and Pain Assessment in Clinical Trials (IMMPACT) consortium and other pain trials consensus groups. These secondary outcomes include pain severity, physical functioning, depression, anxiety, fatigue, sleep, global impression of change, and quality of life. The investigators will evaluate the impact of patient characteristics, treatment preferences and expectations on study outcomes as these variables have been identified in smaller studies to modify treatment response. To derive information rapidly translatable to changes in VA care, the investigators will collect information critical for implementation of the treatment strategies under study. Key implementation factors will include treatment fidelity, treatment adherence, patient acceptance, provider acceptance, logistical feasibility, and resource requirements. Finally, a carefully designed costs and downstream budget impact aim will provide additional practical information for clinical managers and policy makers related to non-pharmacological treatments for cLBP.
The study will involve diverse VA centers with respect to geographical region, racial characteristics of the population served and facility size. The study plans to randomize 2529 patients across 20 centers. Preliminary site surveys indicate a high level of enthusiasm for the project. In addition, a query of the VA's Corporate Data Warehouse (CDW) identified more than 850,000 potential cLBP study subjects receiving regular care through VA. Twenty-five VA medical centers have more than 10,000 potentially eligible patients underscoring the high prevalence of cLBP. The investigators' pragmatic trial design will incorporate broad eligibility criteria.
Chronic low back pain is an enormous problem for the VA, the United States and many other countries. This study will provide definitive information concerning the effectiveness, costs, acceptability, and implementation of several commonly used, patient-preferred, non-pharmacological treatment options. All the selected treatment options carry relatively low levels of risk, are guideline congruent, and are consistent with stepped-care models of healthcare delivery used by the VA and other healthcare organizations. The impact on VA healthcare is expected to be large and immediate.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
SEQUENTIAL
TREATMENT
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Internet-based pain self-management program
Internet-based treatment (Step 1 Treatment)
Pain EASE
The internet-based pain self-management program consists of open access to the Pain EASE program (Pain E-health for Activity, Skills, and Education) for the duration of participation in the trial. Pain EASE has 10 pain coping skill modules: pain education, setting personal goals, planning meaningful activities, physical activity (stretching, body mechanics, and a pedometer-based walking program), relaxation, developing healthy thinking patterns, pacing and problem-solving, improving sleep, effective communication, and future planning.
Enhanced Physical Therapy
Intervention that combines the internet-based pain self-management program with tailored exercise and physical activity guided by a physical therapist (Step 1 treatment)
Pain EASE
The internet-based pain self-management program consists of open access to the Pain EASE program (Pain E-health for Activity, Skills, and Education) for the duration of participation in the trial. Pain EASE has 10 pain coping skill modules: pain education, setting personal goals, planning meaningful activities, physical activity (stretching, body mechanics, and a pedometer-based walking program), relaxation, developing healthy thinking patterns, pacing and problem-solving, improving sleep, effective communication, and future planning.
Tailored exercise
Findings from the initial examination and the Keele STarT Back Screening Tool (Hill, et al., 2011) will be used by the physical therapist to guide and tailor the intervention to individual participants which will involve up to 8 treatment sessions with ongoing home exercise. For most participants, exercise and physical activity will focus on walking in addition to motor control and stabilization exercises for the low back with flexibility exercises when lumbar spine stiffness is present.
Continued Care and Active Monitoring (CCAM)
CCAM will not be standardized keeping in line with the pragmatic nature of this trial. CCAM may be variable across sites and for individual participants reflecting de facto clinical practice for cLBP. Clinical practice may involve pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments for cLBP. Current analgesics (including opioids, acetaminophen, NSAIDs, topical analgesics (capsaicin), serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs), tricyclic antidepressants, skeletal muscle relaxants, and alpha-2-delta ligands (gabapentin-like drugs)) and non-pharmacological treatments may be continued by participants. CCAM participants will be encouraged to discuss pain problems with their treating physician, but not begin new treatments if possible. Patients will specifically be discouraged from starting CBT, chiropractic, or yoga. Other than this, there will be no attempt by study personnel to influence pain management (Step 1 Treatment)
Continued Care and Active Monitoring
CCAM will not be standardized keeping in line with the pragmatic nature of this trial. CCAM may be variable across sites and for individual participants reflecting de facto clinical practice for cLBP. Clinical practice may involve pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments for cLBP. Current analgesics (including opioids, acetaminophen, NSAIDs, topical analgesics (capsaicin), serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs), tricyclic antidepressants, skeletal muscle relaxants, and alpha-2-delta ligands (gabapentin-like drugs)) and non-pharmacological treatments may be continued by participants. CCAM participants will be encouraged to discuss pain problems with their treating physician, but not begin new treatments if possible. Patients will specifically be discouraged from starting CBT, chiropractic, or yoga. Other than this, there will be no attempt by study personnel to influence pain management.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
Participants randomized to CBT in Step 2 will receive treatment with a trained therapist using the VA's CBT-chronic pain (CBT-CP) protocol involving one planning session and 9 treatment sessions (10 total) over 3 months (Step 2 Treatment).
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
Participants randomized to CBT in Step 2 will receive treatment with a trained therapist using the VA's CBT-chronic pain (CBT-CP) protocol involving one planning session and 9 treatment sessions (10 total) over 3 months. The VA's CBT-CP protocol consists of 11 core CBT-CP modules that can be completed in up to 10 sessions. Weekly, individual sessions of 45-50 minutes are recommended, although it is recognized that bi-weekly or other arrangements are often made to fit practical needs.
Spinal Manipulation Therapy (SMT)
After examination by a qualified Doctor of Chiropractic (DC), a SMT intervention consisting of up to 10 sessions over 3 months will be designed focusing on spinal manipulation and/or mobilization of the lower thoracic, lumbar and/or sacroiliac joints. Adjunctive use of myofascial and/or stretching techniques are allowed as they are commonly used along with SMT, and can be considered a standard accompaniment to SMT (Step 2 Treatment).
Spinal Manipulation Therapy (SMT)
After examination by a qualified Doctor of Chiropractic (DC), a SMT intervention consisting of up to 10 sessions over 3 months will be designed focusing on spinal manipulation and/or mobilization of the lower thoracic, lumbar and/or sacroiliac joints. Adjunctive use of myofascial and/or stretching techniques are allowed as they are commonly used along with SMT, and can be considered a standard accompaniment to SMT.
Yoga
The Yoga for Veterans with cLBP program consists of up to 10 weekly, 60-minute instructor-led sessions along with 15-20 minutes of yoga practiced at home each non-session day. The initial session is 75 minutes (15 minutes longer than the other sessions). The yoga program can be considered classical hatha yoga with influences from Iyengar and Viniyoga yoga. These styles emphasize modifications and adaptations including the use of props such as straps and blocks to minimize the risk of injury and make the poses accessible to people with health problems and limitations (Iyengar, 1979). The instructor leads participants through a series of 23 yoga poses (32 total variations) at a slow-moderate pace (Step 2 Treatment).
Yoga
The Yoga for Veterans with cLBP program consists of up to 10 weekly, 60-minute instructor-led sessions along with 15-20 minutes of yoga practiced at home each non-session day. The initial session is 75 minutes (15 minutes longer than the other sessions). The yoga program can be considered classical hatha yoga with influences from Iyengar and Viniyoga yoga. These styles emphasize modifications and adaptations including the use of props such as straps and blocks to minimize the risk of injury and make the poses accessible to people with health problems and limitations (Iyengar, 1979). The instructor leads participants through a series of 23 yoga poses (32 total variations) at a slow-moderate pace.
Interventions
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Pain EASE
The internet-based pain self-management program consists of open access to the Pain EASE program (Pain E-health for Activity, Skills, and Education) for the duration of participation in the trial. Pain EASE has 10 pain coping skill modules: pain education, setting personal goals, planning meaningful activities, physical activity (stretching, body mechanics, and a pedometer-based walking program), relaxation, developing healthy thinking patterns, pacing and problem-solving, improving sleep, effective communication, and future planning.
Tailored exercise
Findings from the initial examination and the Keele STarT Back Screening Tool (Hill, et al., 2011) will be used by the physical therapist to guide and tailor the intervention to individual participants which will involve up to 8 treatment sessions with ongoing home exercise. For most participants, exercise and physical activity will focus on walking in addition to motor control and stabilization exercises for the low back with flexibility exercises when lumbar spine stiffness is present.
Continued Care and Active Monitoring
CCAM will not be standardized keeping in line with the pragmatic nature of this trial. CCAM may be variable across sites and for individual participants reflecting de facto clinical practice for cLBP. Clinical practice may involve pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments for cLBP. Current analgesics (including opioids, acetaminophen, NSAIDs, topical analgesics (capsaicin), serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs), tricyclic antidepressants, skeletal muscle relaxants, and alpha-2-delta ligands (gabapentin-like drugs)) and non-pharmacological treatments may be continued by participants. CCAM participants will be encouraged to discuss pain problems with their treating physician, but not begin new treatments if possible. Patients will specifically be discouraged from starting CBT, chiropractic, or yoga. Other than this, there will be no attempt by study personnel to influence pain management.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
Participants randomized to CBT in Step 2 will receive treatment with a trained therapist using the VA's CBT-chronic pain (CBT-CP) protocol involving one planning session and 9 treatment sessions (10 total) over 3 months. The VA's CBT-CP protocol consists of 11 core CBT-CP modules that can be completed in up to 10 sessions. Weekly, individual sessions of 45-50 minutes are recommended, although it is recognized that bi-weekly or other arrangements are often made to fit practical needs.
Spinal Manipulation Therapy (SMT)
After examination by a qualified Doctor of Chiropractic (DC), a SMT intervention consisting of up to 10 sessions over 3 months will be designed focusing on spinal manipulation and/or mobilization of the lower thoracic, lumbar and/or sacroiliac joints. Adjunctive use of myofascial and/or stretching techniques are allowed as they are commonly used along with SMT, and can be considered a standard accompaniment to SMT.
Yoga
The Yoga for Veterans with cLBP program consists of up to 10 weekly, 60-minute instructor-led sessions along with 15-20 minutes of yoga practiced at home each non-session day. The initial session is 75 minutes (15 minutes longer than the other sessions). The yoga program can be considered classical hatha yoga with influences from Iyengar and Viniyoga yoga. These styles emphasize modifications and adaptations including the use of props such as straps and blocks to minimize the risk of injury and make the poses accessible to people with health problems and limitations (Iyengar, 1979). The instructor leads participants through a series of 23 yoga poses (32 total variations) at a slow-moderate pace.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
1. Low back pain
1. present for at least 6 months,
2. present most days or everyday,
3. interferes the most with activities considering all of the places where the patient experiences pain;
2. Pain, Enjoyment, General Activity (PEG) score of 4 or greater;
3. Veteran age 18 years or older, either sex, any racial or ethnic background;
4. Able to comprehend and willing to sign the study informed consent form;
5. Able to attend in-person treatment sessions;
6. Anticipate continuing care at the enrolling VA for the period of the study;
7. Stable access to the internet at home, work, or other location (e.g. mobile phone), and an email address.
Exclusion Criteria
1. Currently enrolled in any other interventional study unless exempted by CSP;
2. Acute or chronic illness that would prevent the Veteran from receiving study treatments offered (e.g., uncontrolled hypertension, recent myocardial infarction within the last 6 months, unstable angina, acute congestive heart failure);
3. Neurological impairment related to disease of the spine or other causes preventing participation in any of the treatment modalities under study;
4. Current or recent (last 3 months) treatment involving Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Spinal manipulation therapy, or Yoga;
5. Current severe alcohol or substance abuse use disorder;
6. Severe psychiatric illness (e.g. current psychosis, current suicidal ideation, or psychiatric illness requiring hospitalization within the last 6 months);
7. Undergoing evaluation for back surgery or planned back surgery;
8. Cognitive or severe hearing or visual impairment preventing participation in treatment options or outcome measure assessments;
9. Pregnancy;
10. Refusal to provide written consent.
ALL
No
Sponsors
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VA Office of Research and Development
FED
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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David J Clark, PhD MD
Role: STUDY_CHAIR
VA Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, CA
Matthew J. Bair, MD MS
Role: STUDY_CHAIR
Richard L. Roudebush VA Medical Center, Indianapolis, IN
Locations
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Phoenix VA Health Care System, Phoenix, AZ
Phoenix, Arizona, United States
VA Loma Linda Healthcare System, Loma Linda, CA
Loma Linda, California, United States
VA Long Beach Healthcare System, Long Beach, CA
Long Beach, California, United States
VA Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, CA
Palo Alto, California, United States
Rocky Mountain Regional VA Medical Center, Aurora, CO
Aurora, Colorado, United States
Bay Pines VA Healthcare System, Pay Pines, FL
Bay Pines, Florida, United States
Orlando VA Medical Center, Orlando, FL
Orlando, Florida, United States
Atlanta VA Medical and Rehab Center, Decatur, GA
Decatur, Georgia, United States
Richard L. Roudebush VA Medical Center, Indianapolis, IN
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
Baltimore VA Medical Center VA Maryland Health Care System, Baltimore, MD
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
VA Boston Healthcare System Jamaica Plain Campus, Jamaica Plain, MA
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
St. Louis VA Medical Center John Cochran Division, St. Louis, MO
St Louis, Missouri, United States
VA Southern Nevada Healthcare System, North Las Vegas, NV
North Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Asheville VA Medical Center, Asheville, NC
Asheville, North Carolina, United States
VA Portland Health Care System, Portland, OR
Portland, Oregon, United States
South Texas Health Care System, San Antonio, TX
San Antonio, Texas, United States
VA Salt Lake City Health Care System, Salt Lake City, UT
Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
Hampton VA Medical Center, Hampton, VA
Hampton, Virginia, United States
Hunter Holmes McGuire VA Medical Center, Richmond, VA
Richmond, Virginia, United States
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Aram Mardian, MD
Role: primary
Thomas Edell, MD
Role: primary
Patricia Nance, MD
Role: primary
Charles Penza, PhD
Role: primary
Jerry Kalangara, MD
Role: primary
David Haggstrom, MD
Role: primary
Erica Scioli, PhD
Role: primary
Jason Napuli, DC
Role: primary
James Michalets, MD
Role: primary
Stephanie K Liu, MD
Role: primary
John Finnell, MPH
Role: primary
Scott Swasey, MD
Role: primary
References
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Clark JD, Bair MJ, Belitskaya-Levy I, Fitzsimmons C, Zehm LM, Dougherty PE, Giannitrapani KF, Groessl EJ, Higgins DM, Murphy JL, Riddle DL, Huang GD, Shih MC. Sequential and Comparative Evaluation of Pain Treatment Effectiveness Response (SCEPTER), a pragmatic trial for conservative chronic low back pain treatment. Contemp Clin Trials. 2023 Feb;125:107041. doi: 10.1016/j.cct.2022.107041. Epub 2022 Dec 7.
Other Identifiers
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2009
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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