Hypnotic Cognitive Therapy Reduce Acute & Chronic SCI Pain in Inpatient Rehabilitation
NCT ID: NCT05047120
Last Updated: 2024-12-13
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION
NA
88 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2023-09-18
2026-05-15
Brief Summary
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Having demonstrated the feasibility and acceptance of this treatment in an earlier study, the purpose of this randomized clinical trial is to compare the treatment of Hypnosis Enhanced Cognitive (HYPCT) therapy to Pain Education (ED) for reducing acute and chronic pain for individuals with new spinal cord injuries. The main goals of the study are to:
* Aim 1: Test the effectiveness of HYPCT during inpatient rehabilitation for SCI compared to a ED for reducing current pain intensity.
* Aim 2: Determine the post-intervention impact of HYPCT sessions compared to ED on average pain intensity.
Participants will be asked to:
* Complete 4 surveys over seven months
* Complete pre and post treatment pain assessments for each of 4 treatment/control sessions
Participants will be assigned to one of two groups for treatment and receive either:
* 4 Hypnotic Cognitive therapy sessions or
* 4 Pain Education sessions
Detailed Description
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Subjects who meet eligibility criteria and consent to take part in this study will be randomly assigned to one of two groups. One is hypnosis enhance cognitive therapy (HYPCT) group and the other is the pain education (ED) group. Subjects cannot choose which group to be in.
Hypnosis Enhance Cognitive Therapy Group:
Participants assigned to this group will work with a psychologist (PhD) who will provide them with HYPCT. There will be 4 therapy sessions spread out over the duration of the inpatient stay or at least weekly. Sessions will take place in patient hospital rooms and last approximately one hour. Patients will learn some new information and skills to better cope with pain. Sessions will include a brief hypnosis to help patients think about pain in ways that will reduce their experience of pain. During hypnosis, patients spend a lot of time relaxing and listening to the sound of the psychologist's voice. We will record these hypnosis exercises so that patients can listen to them in between sessions with the psychologist.
Pain Education Group:
Participants assigned to this group will work with a psychologist (PhD) who will provide them with ED. There will be 4 education sessions spread out over the duration of the inpatient stay or at least weekly. Sessions will take place in the patient hospital rooms and last approximately one hour. Patients will be educated about pain, including its causes, neurophysiology, nature, and impact. There may be both general pain information as well as information tailored to the SCI specific symptoms. These will be interactive and patients will discuss the content with the therapist. Patients may listen to audio recordings, review educational information and think about what they learned between sessions. Upon completing the study, everyone in the pain education group will be offered the 6 standardized hypnosis audio recordings provided to the HYPCT group. ED group will be asked to complete a survey one month after receiving the standard hypnosis recordings.
Both groups will be asked to complete a baseline survey asking about their demographics, health, and pain. A second survey will be completed after completion of the treatment sessions (HYPCT and ED), a survey will be completed 6 months after that, and then a final survey one month later (at approximately 7 months). The surveys will ask questions about the patient's pain, the treatment of their pain, mood, and sleep quality. A trained research assistant will administer the surveys in person during the rehabilitation hospital stay and by telephone after discharge. These surveys will each take 30-45 minutes. For both groups, before and after each session, patients will be asked about their pain levels and relief. This should take less than 2 minutes.
Conditions
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Keywords
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Hypnosis Enhanced Cognitive Therapy
This arm will receive 4 sessions of hypnosis enhanced cognitive therapy for pain. Subjects will receive recordings of sessions for practice between therapist sessions.
Hypnosis enhanced cognitive behavioral therapy
This therapy entails subjects being induced into a state of relaxation and the receiving cognitive behavioral therapy for pain associated with a new spinal cord injury.
Pain Education
This arm will receive 4 sessions of spinal cord injury pain education. Subjects will receive pain education materials for review between therapist sessions.
Pain Education
This therapy entails subjects learning about the causes, mechanisms, and ways to reduce pain associated with a new spinal cord injury.
Interventions
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Hypnosis enhanced cognitive behavioral therapy
This therapy entails subjects being induced into a state of relaxation and the receiving cognitive behavioral therapy for pain associated with a new spinal cord injury.
Pain Education
This therapy entails subjects learning about the causes, mechanisms, and ways to reduce pain associated with a new spinal cord injury.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* currently admitted to IPR at Harborview Medical Center
* moderately intense pain
* evidences an ability to read and speak English
Exclusion Criteria
* presence or history of mental health problems that would require referral for more intensive treatment or complicate hypnotic treatment
* suicide attempt within the past 6 months
* current, active suicidal ideation, plan, or intent
* unable to provide informed consent.
16 Years
85 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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The Craig H. Neilsen Foundation
OTHER
University of Washington
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Amy Starosta
Assistant Professor, School of Medicine: Dept. of Rehabilitation Medicine
Principal Investigators
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Amy J Starosta, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Washington
Locations
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Harborview Medical Center
Seattle, Washington, United States
Countries
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References
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Starosta AJ, Bombardier CH, Kahlia F, Barber J, Accardi-Ravid MC, Wiechman SA, Crane DA, Jensen MP. Feasibility of Brief, Hypnotic Enhanced Cognitive Therapy for SCI-related Pain During Inpatient Rehabilitation. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2024 Jan;105(1):1-9. doi: 10.1016/j.apmr.2023.06.005. Epub 2023 Jun 25.
Other Identifiers
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STUDY00009601
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id