Uncovering the Mechanism of Pain Relief by Peripheral Transcutaneous Magnetic Stimulation

NCT ID: NCT07199361

Last Updated: 2025-09-30

Study Results

Results pending

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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Recruitment Status

RECRUITING

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

50 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2025-03-24

Study Completion Date

2028-02-25

Brief Summary

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This research aims to uncover the Mechanisms of pain relief through the FDA-cleared peripheral transcutaneous magnetic stimulation (pTMS) device by MagVenture. 50 people with chronic pain (post-surgical or post-traumatic) will be identified and recruited. The eligibility for participation in the study will be evaluated by a series of pain and mental health questionnaires followed by quantitative sensory testing (QST) to assess response to noxious heat, cold, and pressure stimuli. Blood will be drawn to isolate plasma, serum, and leukocytes. Participants will then undergo pTMS at the site of pain for four consecutive days. At the end of the therapy, pain testing will be done again, followed by blood withdrawal to assess the changes in plasma and leukocyte levels of mediators of pain. It is anticipated that pTMS will increase mediators of pain relief and reduce inflammatory mediators. Risks: It is possible that a few participants may not respond to pTMS therapy. However, plasma analysis of mediators of pain may help stratify these participants into responders vs. non-responders. Risks associated with the study are minimal and mainly involve discomfort associated with pain testing. The importance of knowledge gained includes understanding pain relief mechanisms by medical devices such as pTMS, which will result in better pain management.

Detailed Description

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Chronic pain (pain lasting ≥3 months) is a debilitating condition associated with depression, dementia, increased risk of suicide, decreased productivity, and substance abuse. Opioids continue to be a crucial part of pain management. However, the misuse of prescription opioids has led to a shift towards injectable opioids such as heroin, with nearly 80% of new heroin users reporting prior use of prescription opioids. Further, co-morbid substance abuse can exacerbate pain symptoms despite pharmaceutical treatment, revealing the limitations of current pain management strategies. Due to tolerance, people with a history of opioid dependence often need higher doses of opioids to treat acute pain and long-term opioid use paradoxically worsens chronic pain. From a public health perspective, there is an increased chance of transmitting and acquiring hepatitis B and C due to opioid use-related engagement in risky behaviors. Moreover, the economic burden of untreated pain in the US is estimated to be more than $100 billion per year. Therefore, there is an urgent need to develop novel therapeutic strategies and reduce reliance on opioids.

Peripheral Transcutaneous Magnetic Stimulation (pTMS) is a non-invasive method of relieving pain by stimulating the target area with magnetic pulses. The magnetic field pulse passing into the body induces a voltage difference between any two points, which creates an electric field and causes electrons to flow between these two points. The magnetic field can penetrate deep tissue, such as spinal nerve roots or muscles. No mechanical contact is necessary, making pTMS applicable to patients with extreme hypersensitivity or allodynia to skin touch. pTMS is FDA-cleared for post-traumatic and post-surgical chronic pain. However, to date, no clear evidence has emerged about pTMS's potential mechanism of pain relief, which has moderated its applicability and acceptability.

The study will require recruiting patients over the phone, followed by an on-site visit, which includes patient interaction, blood collection, pain study, performing pTMS therapy at the site of pain, and patient monitoring. Three more on-site visits on consecutive days will include pTMS therapy. The last (fourth) visit will include specimen collection and a pain study. The first and the fourth visits will take 2.5 hours, while the second and the third visits will require 30 minutes. The participants will be followed over the phone every 30 days till the completion of the study to inquire about their wellness.

Conditions

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Post-Surgical Pain, Chronic Post-traumatic Pain, Chronic

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

The study is a "pre vs. post" pTMS therapy, a one-group pretest-posttest study model. In this model, all the study participants will undergo pTMS for 4 consecutive days, and the changes in the mediators of chronic pain in plasma, serum, and peripheral immune cells will be measured in therapy responders and non-responders before pTMS and again after pTMS. The goal is to see if the intervention caused a change in the outcome within that same group.
Primary Study Purpose

BASIC_SCIENCE

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Post-traumatic or post-surgical chronic pain

Arm Description: 50 Participants with post-surgical or post-traumatic chronic pain below the neck will be administered peripheral transcutaneous magnetic stimulation at the site of pain for 13 minutes for 4 consecutive days. Participants will be male or female between the ages of 19 and 80 years.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Peripheral Transcutaneous Magnetic Stimulation from MagVenture

Intervention Type DEVICE

MagVenture Pain Therapy System: It is an FDA-cleared magnetic stimulator system that provides brief and focused magnetic pulses to non-invasively stimulate peripheral nerves and provide relief of chronic intractable, post-traumatic, and post-surgical pain for patients 18 years or older. It is a relatively new technique in the US for pain relief in the clinical setting and thus not very widespread yet. Evidence shows Magnetic Peripheral Nerve Stimulation to have a promising average pain relief of up to 87%\*. Using magnetic pulses, MagVenture Pain Therapy engages sensory, pain, and motor fibers mechanistically to recondition the central nervous system by eliminating noxious pain signals to the brain, reducing chronic neuropathic pain for responsive patients.

\*Bedder M, Parker L.: Magnetic Peripheral Nerve Stimulation (mPNS) for Chronic Pain, 2023

Interventions

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Peripheral Transcutaneous Magnetic Stimulation from MagVenture

MagVenture Pain Therapy System: It is an FDA-cleared magnetic stimulator system that provides brief and focused magnetic pulses to non-invasively stimulate peripheral nerves and provide relief of chronic intractable, post-traumatic, and post-surgical pain for patients 18 years or older. It is a relatively new technique in the US for pain relief in the clinical setting and thus not very widespread yet. Evidence shows Magnetic Peripheral Nerve Stimulation to have a promising average pain relief of up to 87%\*. Using magnetic pulses, MagVenture Pain Therapy engages sensory, pain, and motor fibers mechanistically to recondition the central nervous system by eliminating noxious pain signals to the brain, reducing chronic neuropathic pain for responsive patients.

\*Bedder M, Parker L.: Magnetic Peripheral Nerve Stimulation (mPNS) for Chronic Pain, 2023

Intervention Type DEVICE

Eligibility Criteria

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Exclusion Criteria

Currently receiving pain medication Chronic pain must self-report peripheral pain, more than once per week, for at least three consecutive months


* Implanted Electronic Devices and / or Conductive Objects in or near the head: Patients who have an implanted device that is activated or controlled in any way by physiological signals (examples: deep brain stimulators, cochlear implants, and vagus nerve stimulators).

Non-Removable Metallic Objects near the coil: Patients who have conductive, ferromagnetic, or other magnetic-sensitive metals implanted in their head or within 30 cm of the treatment coil (examples: cochlear implants, implanted electrodes/stimulators, aneurysm clips or coils, stents, and bullet fragments). F NOTE: Standard amalgam dental fillings are not affected by the magnetic field and are acceptable in patients.

Active microbial infections may alter the quantity or quality of blood inflammatory cells such as monocytes and neutrophils.

Positive Urine Drug test: (COC/AMP/OPI/mAMP/PCP/BAR/BZO/MTD/MDMA/OXY/PPX/BUP/TCA) Use of any medication other than pain medications. However, participants will not be excluded or asked to withdraw from medications used for pain management since temporary withdrawal from these medications could affect pain measures (exceptions will be therapies such as methadone or buprenorphine used to treat opioid addiction). Only those who have been stable on these medications for at least 60 days will be included. All patient medications used for at least 60 days prior to participation will be recorded and controlled in statistical analyses as needed.

Systemic rheumatic disease (e.g., rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus). These rheumatologic conditions will be excluded due to their autoimmune characteristic.

Cachexia (wasting syndrome) and severe frailty as determined by the Groningen Frailty Index (score \>4). This exclusion is in place to protect against the stress of experimental pain testing.

Uncontrolled hypertension (i.e. SBP/DBP of \>140/90) or cardiovascular or peripheral arterial disease. These exclusions are in place primarily for safety reasons because the cold pressor task represents a cardiovascular challenge. However, uncontrolled hypertension can also affect pain perception, which is another reason for excluding these individuals.

Poorly controlled diabetes (HbA1c \> 8%) for both safety reasons and because diabetic neuropathy could alter pain perception.

Neurological disease (e.g. Parkinson's, multiple sclerosis). Serious psychiatric disorder requiring hospitalization within the past 12 months or characterized by active suicidal ideation. Any participant deemed to be actively suicidal upon study screening will be escorted to the emergency room and evaluated by the Psychiatry Service.

A diminished cognitive function that would interfere with the understanding of study procedures. The Mini-Mental Status Exam (MMSE) will be administered to ensure that participants are free of cognitive impairment that would compromise study participation. MMSE \<18 will be excluded.

Pregnancy
Minimum Eligible Age

19 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

80 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Baptist Health South Florida

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

Florida International University

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Dr. Saurabh Aggarwal

Associate Professor

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Saurabh Aggarwal, MD., PhD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Florida International University

Patricia Junquera, MD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Florida International University and Baptist Health South Florida

Eduardo Icaza, MD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Baptist Health South Florida

Locations

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Ambulatory Care Center, Florida International University

Miami, Florida, United States

Site Status RECRUITING

Countries

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United States

Central Contacts

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Associate Professor

Role: CONTACT

305-348-9634

Facility Contacts

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Milene Echevarria

Role: primary

305-348-6023

Other Identifiers

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IRB-25-0065

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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