- ICH GCP
- US Clinical Trials Registry
- Clinical Trial NCT00957164
Treatment of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and Chronic Pain After Traumatic Orthopedic Injury
January 29, 2014 updated by: The University of Texas at Arlington
Treatment of PTSD and Chronic Pain After Traumatic Orthopedic Injury: A Randomized Clinical Trial
The purpose of this study is to examine the efficacy of multiple treatment options in addressing the co-morbidity between pain and PTSD symptoms.
Recent research has suggested that pain and PTSD co-morbidity presents unique problems for pain and PTSD treatment, and new approaches are desperately needed to address this issue.
To this end, the investigators hope to identify the efficacy of a combined pain and PTSD psychosocial treatment protocol compared to that of stand-alone psychosocial treatments for pain and PTSD.
The primary measure for treatment efficacy will be treatment-related changes in measures of psychosocial and functional outcomes associated with chronic pain and PTSD conditions.
The investigators will additionally measure socioeconomic outcomes including return to pre-trauma job (or a job of similar capacity), maintenance of active duty work at pre-trauma capacity for 6 and/or 12 months after return, and number of healthcare appointments made between follow-ups for pain or PTSD treatment.
Study Overview
Status
Completed
Conditions
Detailed Description
This study will use a four-group randomized experimental design similar to that used in a study currently being conducted by John Otis with VA patients with chronic pain/chronic PTSD.
The four groups will include Pain Treatment (PAIN) only, PTSD Treatment (PTSD) only, Pain and PTSD Treatments (PAIN+PTSD), and treatment as usual (TAU).
The investigators hypothesize that treating individuals with chronic pain and PTSD (e.g., more than 6 months in duration) symptoms through a proven psychosocial model will help to improve psychological, socioeconomic and physical symptoms of these chronic clinical syndromes that have been shown to be unfortunately recalcitrant to treatment and enormously costly both to society healthcare and, more importantly, to the person suffering from enduring pain and traumatic stress.
We further hope to demonstrate the efficacy of these early treatments in facilitating the return to active duty of military personnel suffering from pain and traumatic stress.
Finally, we hope to positively impact other psychosocial and socioeconomic outcomes such as work retention (as measured by self-report work status and retention of work at 6- and 12-month follow-up), additional health-care utilization (as measured by self-report of number of PTSD or pain-related healthcare visits), depression symptoms (as measured by the Beck Depression Inventory), health-related quality of life (as measured by the SF-36), and perceived disability (as measured by the Million Visual Analog Scale).
Evaluations of these four groups will be conducted at pre-treatment, immediately at the post-treatment, and at 6- and 12-month follow-up periods in order to determine differential outcomes on variables such as PTSD and pain symptom presence/severity, self-reported pain and disability, functional gains, satisfaction with treatment, return to active duty, retention of pre-trauma work capacity at 6- and 12-month follow-up, and additional health-care utilization as measured by number of healthcare appointments attended for pain or PTSD symptom management.
The initial post-treatment evaluation will occur at the end of the ten-week treatment interval for each individual's randomization block.
For those in the treatment as usual (TAU) group, post-treatment assessment will occur ten weeks after pre-treatment assessment is completed.
Changes in functional activity status, psychosocial functioning, and satisfaction with treatment will also be systematically evaluated before, immediately after, and during the post-treatment periods.
It should be noted that many of the PAIN-only, and TAU subjects may receive some type of standard care for PTSD symptoms if they access those services on their own.
The same could be true for the PTSD-only and TAU subjects.
They may also receive some type of standard care for pain symptoms that they access on their own.
The investigators will monitor any such services received in order to attempt to control for possible spurious effects of outside treatment in later analyses.
Study Type
Interventional
Enrollment (Actual)
51
Phase
- Not Applicable
Contacts and Locations
This section provides the contact details for those conducting the study, and information on where this study is being conducted.
Study Locations
-
-
Texas
-
Arlington, Texas, United States, 76019
- The University of Texas at Arlington
-
Fort Sam Houston, Texas, United States
- Brooke Army Medical Center
-
Lackland AFB, Texas, United States, 78236
- Wilford Hall Medical Center
-
San Antonio, Texas, United States, 78229
- University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
-
-
Participation Criteria
Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.
Eligibility Criteria
Ages Eligible for Study
14 years to 66 years (Adult, Older Adult)
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No
Genders Eligible for Study
All
Description
Inclusion Criteria:
- age 18 years or older
- hospital admission for any traumatic orthopedic injury defined as any musculo-skeletal injury requiring convalescence and/or surgery that is deployment related.
- Fluency in English
- Glasgow Coma Score (GCS) = 15 at time of hospital discharge
- willingness and ability to meet study follow-up requirements
- PTSD CheckList - Military (PCL-M) > 30
- duration of any amount of pain >12 weeks based on self-report and date of injury, and PTSD symptoms of > to 4 weeks.
- Pain Disability Questionnaire (PDQ) > 30
- no current need for surgical intervention for pain
- be stable on any psychotropic medications they may be taking. (Participants will be required to meet psychotropic medication stabilization criteria for the periods preceding and overlapping with the diagnostic assessment and treatment. This criterion is established in order to minimize the likelihood that significant outcome effects may be attributed to changes in psychotropic medications rather than to the treatment protocol.)
- medically cleared for study participation by Orthopedic provider or collaborating study physician
- Active Duty Military, Reserve, or Activated Reservist
Exclusion Criteria:
- head injury greater than mild TBI as assessed by an inability to consent to the study and complete the baseline psychological testing
- current pregnancy will exclude participation in Functional Capacity Evaluation (FCE) assessment, but not study participation. Pregnancy will be assessed by self-report
- current diagnosis of schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or other psychotic disorder as identified by clinical interview
- primary diagnosis of burn injury, though burn patients will be eligible if burn is a secondary diagnosis and not the primary reason for pain
- participant is currently taking a benzodiazepine medication for PTSD symptoms
- unstable suicidal ideation
- currently receiving prolonged exposure treatment for PTSD
Study Plan
This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.
How is the study designed?
Design Details
- Primary Purpose: Treatment
- Allocation: Randomized
- Interventional Model: Parallel Assignment
- Masking: Triple
Arms and Interventions
Participant Group / Arm |
Intervention / Treatment |
|---|---|
|
Active Comparator: Pain Treatment Only
Pain treatment will involve five-sessions over 5 weeks of individual treatment protocol based on the existing chronic pain management program through the Clinical Health Psychology Service at Wilford Hall Medical Center.
This treatment will involve covering the difference between chronic and acute pain, the role of cognitive, behavioral, and emotional variables in pain progression, and ways to manage these variables to prevent the development of chronic pain.
|
Pain treatment will involve five-sessions over 5 weeks of individual treatment protocol based on the existing chronic pain management program through the Clinical Health Psychology Service at Wilford Hall Medical Center.
This treatment will involve covering the difference between chronic and acute pain, the role of cognitive, behavioral, and emotional variables in pain progression, and ways to manage these variables to prevent the development of chronic pain.
participants randomized to either the Pain-only or PTSD-only groups will receive five sessions of pain- or PTSD-specific treatment followed by five sessions of self-care placebo over 5 weeks.
The self-care module will be manualized for reliability and fidelity between providers and will involve 60-minute sessions covering various topics.
|
|
Active Comparator: PTSD Treatment Only
The PTSD treatment used in this study is an adaptation of a brief Prolonged Exposure treatment protocol for PTSD as illustrated in a 2005 paper published by Cigrang, Peterson, and Schobitz in which a 4-session prolonged exposure treatment was used to address PTSD symptoms in three injured soldiers recently exposed to trauma.
The authors found a 50+% decrease in PTSD symptoms after these four sessions.
The present study will rely upon a similar brief PTSD intervention for treating chronic PTSD among trauma-exposed injured active duty service members.
The PTSD intervention will be expanded into five sessions over 5 weeks to include an initial session for assessment and education on the co-morbidity of pain and PTSD.
All PTSD treatment will be provided under the direct care or supervision of a Master Trained therapist in Prolonged Exposure.
|
participants randomized to either the Pain-only or PTSD-only groups will receive five sessions of pain- or PTSD-specific treatment followed by five sessions of self-care placebo over 5 weeks.
The self-care module will be manualized for reliability and fidelity between providers and will involve 60-minute sessions covering various topics.
The PTSD treatment used in this study is an adaptation of a brief Prolonged Exposure treatment protocol for PTSD as illustrated in a 2005 paper published by Cigrang, Peterson, and Schobitz 54 in which a 4-session prolonged exposure treatment was used to address PTSD symptoms in three injured soldiers recently exposed to trauma.
The authors found a 50+% decrease in PTSD symptoms after these four sessions.
The present study will rely upon a similar brief PTSD intervention for treating chronic PTSD among trauma-exposed injured active duty service members.
The PTSD intervention will be expanded into five sessions over 5 weeks to include an initial session for assessment and education on the co-morbidity of pain and PTSD.
All PTSD treatment will be provided under the direct care or supervision of a Master Trained therapist in Prolonged Exposure.
|
|
Active Comparator: Combined Pain and PTSD Treatment
This treatment arm will involve 5 sessions each of the Pain-Only and PTSD-Only treatments described above.
|
Pain treatment will involve five-sessions over 5 weeks of individual treatment protocol based on the existing chronic pain management program through the Clinical Health Psychology Service at Wilford Hall Medical Center.
This treatment will involve covering the difference between chronic and acute pain, the role of cognitive, behavioral, and emotional variables in pain progression, and ways to manage these variables to prevent the development of chronic pain.
The PTSD treatment used in this study is an adaptation of a brief Prolonged Exposure treatment protocol for PTSD as illustrated in a 2005 paper published by Cigrang, Peterson, and Schobitz 54 in which a 4-session prolonged exposure treatment was used to address PTSD symptoms in three injured soldiers recently exposed to trauma.
The authors found a 50+% decrease in PTSD symptoms after these four sessions.
The present study will rely upon a similar brief PTSD intervention for treating chronic PTSD among trauma-exposed injured active duty service members.
The PTSD intervention will be expanded into five sessions over 5 weeks to include an initial session for assessment and education on the co-morbidity of pain and PTSD.
All PTSD treatment will be provided under the direct care or supervision of a Master Trained therapist in Prolonged Exposure.
|
|
No Intervention: Treatment as Usual
The treatment as usual group will complete the assessments given in each of the other study arms, but will not participate in treatment through the study.
Instead, participants randomized to this group will be encouraged to seek treatment for pain and/or PTSD through existing channels.
Referrals for treatment will be made for those with clinically significant symptoms for pain and/or PTSD at intake.
|
What is the study measuring?
Primary Outcome Measures
Outcome Measure |
Time Frame |
|---|---|
|
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Symptoms/Diagnosis
Time Frame: 1 Year
|
1 Year
|
|
Chronic Pain Intensity
Time Frame: 1 Year
|
1 Year
|
|
Self-reported disability
Time Frame: 1 Year
|
1 Year
|
Secondary Outcome Measures
Outcome Measure |
Time Frame |
|---|---|
|
Depression/Suicidality
Time Frame: 1 Year
|
1 Year
|
Collaborators and Investigators
This is where you will find people and organizations involved with this study.
Collaborators
Investigators
- Principal Investigator: Robert J. Gatchel, Ph.D., University of Texas at Arlington
- Principal Investigator: Donald D. McGeary, Ph.D., Wilford Hall Medical Center, USAF
- Study Director: Mysti R. Moore, MPT, University of Texas at Arlington
Study record dates
These dates track the progress of study record and summary results submissions to ClinicalTrials.gov. Study records and reported results are reviewed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to make sure they meet specific quality control standards before being posted on the public website.
Study Major Dates
Study Start
August 1, 2009
Primary Completion (Actual)
September 1, 2012
Study Completion (Actual)
September 1, 2013
Study Registration Dates
First Submitted
August 10, 2009
First Submitted That Met QC Criteria
August 11, 2009
First Posted (Estimate)
August 12, 2009
Study Record Updates
Last Update Posted (Estimate)
January 31, 2014
Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria
January 29, 2014
Last Verified
January 1, 2014
More Information
Terms related to this study
Keywords
Additional Relevant MeSH Terms
Other Study ID Numbers
- STRONGSTAR*PAIN*PTSD
This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.
Clinical Trials on Chronic Pain
-
University Rovira i VirgiliMinisterio de Ciencia e Innovación, SpainNot yet recruitingChronic Post-operative Pain | Chronic Postsurgical Pain | Chronic Post-surgical Pain | Chronic Postoperative PainSpain
-
Pain ConcernThe Thistle Foundation; Health and Social Care Alliance Scotland (the ALLIANCE) and other collaboratorsCompletedChronic Pain | Chronic Pain Syndrome | Chronic Pain, Widespread | Chronic Pain Due to Trauma | Chronic Pain Due to Malignancy (Finding) | Chronic Pain Due to Injury | Chronic Pain Post-Procedural | Chronic Pain HipUnited Kingdom
-
Bjorn AngKarolinska Institutet; The Swedish Research Council; Göteborg University; Forte; Dalarna...Not yet recruitingPain Management | Pain, Chronic | Chronic Pain, WidespreadSweden
-
University of FaisalabadNot yet recruiting
-
Universidade do Vale do ParaíbaCAPES Foundation - Ministry of Education, Brazil.Enrolling by invitationChronic Low Back Pain | Chronic Shoulder Pain | Chronic Knee PainBrazil
-
Washington D.C. Veterans Affairs Medical CenterRecruitingChronic Back Pain | Chronic Pain (back / Neck)United States
-
Vastra Gotaland RegionCompletedPain, Chronic | Widespread Chronic PainSweden
-
Connecticut Children's Medical CenterRecruitingChronic Pain | Pain, Chronic | Chronic Pain SyndromeUnited States
-
The University of Texas Health Science Center,...RecruitingJoint Pain | Chronic Knee Pain | Chronic Pain (Back / Neck) | Chronic Pain ManagementUnited States
-
University of Alabama, TuscaloosaPatient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute; East Carolina University; Whatley...CompletedPain | Chronic Pain | Chronic Pain Syndrome | Widespread Chronic Pain | Chronic Pain Due to InjuryUnited States
Clinical Trials on Chronic Pain Management Treatment
-
Ottawa Hospital Research InstituteNot yet recruitingQuality of Life | Chronic PainCanada
-
University of Colorado, BoulderNational Institutes of Health (NIH); Radiological Society of North America; Psychophysiologic... and other collaboratorsCompletedChronic Pain | Back Pain Lower Back Chronic | Back Pain, LowUnited States
-
University of WashingtonNational Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH)Completed
-
University of SaskatchewanSaskatchewan Health Research Foundation; Ralston Brothers Grant (Kelsey Trail...Completed
-
West Virginia UniversityCenters for Disease Control and Prevention; West Virginia School of Osteopathic... and other collaboratorsCompleted
-
Medstar Health Research InstituteEnrolling by invitationChronic Pelvic Pain SyndromeUnited States
-
University of the Sciences in PhiladelphiaUnknownObesity | Chronic PainUnited States
-
University of SouthamptonGreat Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation TrustUnknownChronic PainUnited Kingdom
-
University of AarhusTRYG Foundation; Danish Committee for Health EducationCompletedChronic PainDenmark
-
Hospital San Juan de Dios del Aljarafe de SevillaNot yet recruitingQuality of Life | Chronic Pain Syndrome | Patient Empowerment | Sensitization, CentralSpain