Home-based Transcranial Stimulation in the Treatment of Patients With Refractory Chronic Pain
NCT ID: NCT05099406
Last Updated: 2021-10-29
Study Results
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Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
NA
120 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2022-01-01
2023-05-01
Brief Summary
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The main objective of this research is to test the efficacy of two tES techniques, differentiated by applying direct or alternant electrical current, to reduce the pain intensity and to increase pain thresholds of these patients. Besides, intervention is implemented at home for patients themselves thanks to a portable and convenient stimulator device, after one training session provided by technicians. Researches can supervise the compliance of the treatment remotely, as the stimulator has a permanent connection with their computers. A home-based approach means a more comfortable and accessible treatment alternative for patients, since they do not have to attend to clinics everyday to receive the stimulation; the advantages become even more relevant in the pandemic context, since the risk of being infected is radically minimized.
Despite the main purpose is to test the efficacy of tES to improve the pain suffered by patients, many other areas are considered as secondary end points for being intrinsically linked or affected by the disease, such as the interference in daily tasks provoked by pain, mood disorders (depression/anxiety), fatigue, life quality, physical functioning and sleep quality; these last two variables are measured with actigraph wristwatches, apart from specific questionnaires. Lastly, endogenous modulatory pain mechanisms are examined through sensory tests, namely Conditioned Pain Modulation and Temporal Summation of pain.
Detailed Description
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Therefore, the research aims to test the role of defective central pain modulation/processing as explanatory mechanisms for chronic pain. A second main objective is to test the efficacy of transcranial electric stimulation (tES) to modify dysfunction of central mechanism of pain, and to improve symptoms and quality of life in refractory chronic pain patients.
To achieve this, the investigators will select valid and reliable instruments to assess pain and comorbid symptoms in chronic pain patients and the most sensitive outcome measures to assess tES treatment efficacy. Sensory testing paradigms, namely Conditioned Pain Modulation, Temporal Summation of Second Pain and pain-related evoked potentials using electroencephalographic recordings, will act as biomarkers which are proposed to correlate with the severity of the chronic pain disease or some of their symptoms, and also as predictors of the treatment outcome.
Total sample includes 120 patients with refractory pharmaco-resistant pain, attended at the Pain Units of two Public Galician Hospitals (36 male, 84 female).
The study is expected to contribute to detection and preventive measures of future pain, and diagnosis of chronic pain disorders, improving prognosis and development of feasible patient-centered interventions, providing new directions for future research on pain.
Conditions
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Keywords
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
QUADRUPLE
Study Groups
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Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS)
Fifteen stimulation sessions applied with a daily frequency during an uninterrupted period of time which comprises just over two weeks. Current intensity of 2mA is applied during 20 minutes at the left M1, with anodal electrode placed in C3 and cathodal in FP2, following the International 10-20 EEG System. Ramp-up and ramp-down comprises 15 seconds at the beginning and end of the stimulation period.
Transcranial electrical stimulation
By applying a low current over the cortex through the scalp, this technique can excite or inhibit the neural activity, thus modulating brain processes like pain perception and inducing relatively sustained changes in cortical excitability and neuroplasticity.
Home-based transcranial electrical stimulation device consists of a custom headgear with fixed electrode sites and built-in cabling made for a simplistic setup for tDCS/tACS stimulation. Systems are equipped with strict dose control feature that provide reliable control over the intensity and timing of stimulation, turning these devices into a feasible and safe clinical alternative. The equipment is specifically designed for easy and simplistic self-setup and allows the researchers to remotely check the position of electrodes and also monitor the stimulation session.
Transcranial alternant current stimulation (tACS)
Fifteen stimulation sessions applied with a daily frequency during an uninterrupted period of time which comprises just over two weeks. Two electrodes will be placed at F3 and F4 and connected together for 10-Hz tACS (or the frequency which shows best sensitivity or specificity), and one electrode at Pz will be the return electrode. This setting is used to stimulate the somatosensory cortical region. Stimulation will last for 20 minutes, with a ramp-up and ramp-down of 15 seconds at the beginning and end of the session.
Transcranial electrical stimulation
By applying a low current over the cortex through the scalp, this technique can excite or inhibit the neural activity, thus modulating brain processes like pain perception and inducing relatively sustained changes in cortical excitability and neuroplasticity.
Home-based transcranial electrical stimulation device consists of a custom headgear with fixed electrode sites and built-in cabling made for a simplistic setup for tDCS/tACS stimulation. Systems are equipped with strict dose control feature that provide reliable control over the intensity and timing of stimulation, turning these devices into a feasible and safe clinical alternative. The equipment is specifically designed for easy and simplistic self-setup and allows the researchers to remotely check the position of electrodes and also monitor the stimulation session.
Sham stimulation
The electrode montage will be either the tDCS (for half of the participants) or the tACS montage (for the other half), and we will just apply the current at the ramps terms, but no current in the interval between the ramps which practically comprises the whole session. As for the two other group, fifteen sham stimulation sessions will be daily scheduled in a non-interrupted period of two weeks.
Transcranial electrical stimulation
By applying a low current over the cortex through the scalp, this technique can excite or inhibit the neural activity, thus modulating brain processes like pain perception and inducing relatively sustained changes in cortical excitability and neuroplasticity.
Home-based transcranial electrical stimulation device consists of a custom headgear with fixed electrode sites and built-in cabling made for a simplistic setup for tDCS/tACS stimulation. Systems are equipped with strict dose control feature that provide reliable control over the intensity and timing of stimulation, turning these devices into a feasible and safe clinical alternative. The equipment is specifically designed for easy and simplistic self-setup and allows the researchers to remotely check the position of electrodes and also monitor the stimulation session.
Interventions
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Transcranial electrical stimulation
By applying a low current over the cortex through the scalp, this technique can excite or inhibit the neural activity, thus modulating brain processes like pain perception and inducing relatively sustained changes in cortical excitability and neuroplasticity.
Home-based transcranial electrical stimulation device consists of a custom headgear with fixed electrode sites and built-in cabling made for a simplistic setup for tDCS/tACS stimulation. Systems are equipped with strict dose control feature that provide reliable control over the intensity and timing of stimulation, turning these devices into a feasible and safe clinical alternative. The equipment is specifically designed for easy and simplistic self-setup and allows the researchers to remotely check the position of electrodes and also monitor the stimulation session.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Adult subjects (18-65 years old).
* Subjects able to provide informed consent to participate in the study and to self-report pain.
* Existing chronic pain which reaches an intensity of at least 4 on a 0-10 Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) on average over the past 3 months prior to enrolment.
* Pain intensity of at least 5 on a 0-10 NRS over the week prior to enrolment.
* Diagnosis of pharmaco-resistance to analgesic drugs across the WHO ladder.
* Pharmacological regimen have kept stable for at least two months previous to the enrolment, and it must not suffer modifications during the whole research period.
Exclusion Criteria
* Pregnant women or women in fertile age not having efficacious contraception during the whole period of the study.
* History of alcohol or drug abuse within the past 6 months as self-reported.
* Suffering from unstable medical conditions (e.g., uncontrolled diabetes, uncompensated cardiac issues, heart failure or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease).
* Intracranial ferromagnetic devices or implanted stimulator (basal ganglia stimulator, vagus nerve stimulation).
* Antecedents of, or active epilepsy.
* History of neurosurgery, psychiatric diseases other than anxiety or depression, traumatic brain injury with loss of consciousness, and/or cortical lesions.
18 Years
65 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Ministry of Science and Innovation, Spain
OTHER_GOV
Health Research Institute of Santiago de Compostela - IDIS (Recruitment support)
UNKNOWN
Fundación Biomédica Galicia Sur (Recruitment support)
UNKNOWN
University of Santiago de Compostela
OTHER
Responsible Party
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María Teresa Carrillo de la Peña
Titular university professor (PhD)
Principal Investigators
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María Teresa Carrillo de la Peña
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Santiago de Compostela
Locations
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University of Santiago de Compostela
Santiago de Compostela, A Coruña, Spain
Countries
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Central Contacts
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María Teresa Carrillo de la Peña, PhD
Role: CONTACT
Phone: +34 625 76 32 25
Email: [email protected]
Facility Contacts
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María Teresa Carrillo de la Peña, PhD
Role: primary
References
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Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan
Other Identifiers
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2021-000804-39
Identifier Type: EUDRACT_NUMBER
Identifier Source: secondary_id
2019-PN133
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id