- ICH GCP
- US Clinical Trials Registry
- Clinical Trial NCT01802671
Efficacy Study of Cognitive Behavioural Treatment With Support on Communication and Information Technologies for the Management of Chronic Low Back Pain (POETS)
Cognitive Behavioural Treatment With Support on Communication and Information Technologies for the Management of Chronic Low Back Pain: A Randomized Clinical Trial
Study Overview
Status
Conditions
Detailed Description
Background: Psychological treatments have been successful in the treatment of chronic low back pain (CLBP). However the effect sizes are still modest and there is room for improvement. A way to progress in this line is enhancing treatment adherence and self-management by means of information and communication technologies (ICT). The objective of this study is to investigate the short- and long-term efficacy of a Cognitive Behavioural Treatment (CBT) group program for CLBP supported versus non-supported by ICTs. A secondary objective is to evaluate the influence of relevant variables in treatment response. Possible barriers in the implementation of CBT with and without ICT will be also investigated.
Methods: A randomized controlled trail with 180 CLBP patients recruited in specialized care will be conducted. Participants will be randomly assigned to three conditions: Control group (CG), Cognitive Behavioural program (CBT), and CBT supported by ICTs (CBT + ICT). Participants belonging to the three conditions will receive a conventional rehabilitation program (back school). The CBT group program will last six sessions. The CBT + ICT will use the Internet and SMS in order to practice the therapeutic strategies between sessions and in the follow-ups in their homes. Primary outcome variables are self-reported disability and pain intensity. Assessment will be carried out by blinded assessors in five moments: pre-treatment, post-treatment and 3-, 6-, and 12-month follow-up. The influence of catastrophizing, fear-avoidance beliefs, anxiety and depression in response to treatment in the primary outcomes will be also analysed.
Discussion This study will show data of the possible benefits of the use of ICTs in the improvement of CBT for the treatment of CLBP
Study Type
Enrollment (Anticipated)
Phase
- Not Applicable
Contacts and Locations
Study Locations
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Valencia, Spain, 46015
- Hospital Arnau de Vilanova
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Participation Criteria
Eligibility Criteria
Ages Eligible for Study
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Genders Eligible for Study
Description
Inclusion Criteria:
- age between 20 and 65 years
- suffering low back pain for at least 6 months
- availability of mobile phone in order to get SMS
- access to computer with Internet connection in order to be able to use the CBT program supported by ICT
Exclusion Criteria:
- mental retardation
- not proficient in Spanish
- neurogenic claudication or neurologic deficit
- history of vertebral fracture, previous lumbar surgery
- vertebral infection
- spinal or nerve tumor
- severe mental disorder or substance abuse or dependence.
Study Plan
How is the study designed?
Design Details
- Primary Purpose: Treatment
- Allocation: Randomized
- Interventional Model: Parallel Assignment
- Masking: Single
Arms and Interventions
Participant Group / Arm |
Intervention / Treatment |
|---|---|
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Experimental: cognitive behaviour therapy supported by ICT
The patients of this group will receive the same interventions that the CBT group but will receive a reinforcements of the sessions' content through two different ways: a web tool named TEO (Emotional Therapy Online) and SMS that will send to the patients' mobile phone with reminders and reinforcements.
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Patients will receive the traditional rehabilitation treatment (back school).
This treatment will consist of a 4-session group therapy every week, with each session lasting 45 minutes.
The content of the first session will be educational (ergonomics, pain demystification) and the other three will include physical therapy focused on stabilisation training: lower extremity stretching; finding the neutral spine position; spine stabiliser activation (transversus abdominis and multifidus); abdominal, spinal extensor and lower extremity strengthening; and proprioceptive control (stabilisation kinesitherapy)
Patients will receive the same treatment in physical therapy than the control group and additionally they will receive CBT. The aim of the CBT intervention is to produce changes in the beliefs and behaviors about physical activity and avoidance of activity. The treatment's components are:
The patients of this group will receive the same interventions that the CBT group but will receive a reinforcements of the sessions' content through two different ways, both based on ICTs: a web tool named TEO (Emotional Therapy Online) specially designed to practicing the therapeutic strategies at home; and SMS that will send to the patients' mobile phone with reminders and reinforcements.
The content of sessions will be related to the therapeutic components including on the CBT.
Patients will access TEO from their home using a personal password.
Besides TEO, messages will be sent through SMS three times per week during the treatment and once a week during the follow-up.
The messages will consist on reminders to do the homework along with reinforcements of the working and effort made to improve their health.
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Active Comparator: Rehabilitation treatment and information
Patients will receive the traditional rehabilitation treatment and information
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Patients will receive the traditional rehabilitation treatment (back school).
This treatment will consist of a 4-session group therapy every week, with each session lasting 45 minutes.
The content of the first session will be educational (ergonomics, pain demystification) and the other three will include physical therapy focused on stabilisation training: lower extremity stretching; finding the neutral spine position; spine stabiliser activation (transversus abdominis and multifidus); abdominal, spinal extensor and lower extremity strengthening; and proprioceptive control (stabilisation kinesitherapy)
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Experimental: cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT)
Patients will receive the same treatment in physical therapy than the control group and additionally they will receive CBT.
|
Patients will receive the traditional rehabilitation treatment (back school).
This treatment will consist of a 4-session group therapy every week, with each session lasting 45 minutes.
The content of the first session will be educational (ergonomics, pain demystification) and the other three will include physical therapy focused on stabilisation training: lower extremity stretching; finding the neutral spine position; spine stabiliser activation (transversus abdominis and multifidus); abdominal, spinal extensor and lower extremity strengthening; and proprioceptive control (stabilisation kinesitherapy)
Patients will receive the same treatment in physical therapy than the control group and additionally they will receive CBT. The aim of the CBT intervention is to produce changes in the beliefs and behaviors about physical activity and avoidance of activity. The treatment's components are:
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What is the study measuring?
Primary Outcome Measures
Outcome Measure |
Measure Description |
Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
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Change in Disability: Change in the Roland-Morris Questionnaire
Time Frame: five assessment periods (pre-treatment, post-treatment, and three follow-ups at 3, 6 and 12 months).
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The Roland-Morris Questionnaire is one of the most widely used measures to assess disability in patients with low back pain, and it has shown good psychometrics properties (reliability and validity).
The Spanish version of the RM will be completed by the patients.
This questionnaire was designed to evaluate low back pain, with 24 statements that describe different daily activities that can be affected by low back pain.
The participant has to select those statements that describe the limitations produced by low back pain.
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five assessment periods (pre-treatment, post-treatment, and three follow-ups at 3, 6 and 12 months).
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Change in Pain measured by Numerical Rating Scale (NRS)
Time Frame: five assessment periods (pre-treatment, post-treatment, and three follow-ups at 3, 6 and 12 months).
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Pain: IMMPACT recommends the use of Numerical Rating Scales (NRS) as a core outcome measure of efficacy in clinical trials of chronic pain treatments.
The scale is composed of 11 numbers ranging from 0 to 10 with 0 meaning 'No pain' and '10' meaning 'Pain as bad as you can imagine'.
Two different scales will be used, one to assess low back pain and the other one to assess sciatica pain
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five assessment periods (pre-treatment, post-treatment, and three follow-ups at 3, 6 and 12 months).
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Secondary Outcome Measures
Outcome Measure |
Measure Description |
Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
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Change in Pain coping strategies
Time Frame: five assessment periods (pre-treatment, post-treatment, and three follow-ups at 3, 6 and 12 months).
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Pain coping strategies: The Coping Strategies Questionnaire (CSQ) assesses the frequency of several cognitive and behavioral strategies to cope with pain.
Patients must select in a Likert-type scale how often they use each strategy.
It comprises seven subscales, six for cognitive strategies (ignoring pain, reinterpretation of pain, diverting attention, coping self statements, catastrophizing, praying/hoping) and one subscale for behavioural strategies (activity level).
This questionnaire has been validated in the Spanish population and has shown good psychometrics properties to the evaluation of patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain.
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five assessment periods (pre-treatment, post-treatment, and three follow-ups at 3, 6 and 12 months).
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Change in Anxiety and Depression
Time Frame: five assessment periods (pre-treatment, post-treatment, and three follow-ups at 3, 6 and 12 months).
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Levels of anxiety and depression will be assessed by using the HADS questionnaire (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Score).
This questionnaire is widely used in clinical practice.
The HADS is a fourteen item scale where seven of the items are related to anxiety and the others seven are related to depression.
The Spanish version has shown good internal consistency and external validity, as well as an adequate sensitivity in order to identify clinically significant depression.
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five assessment periods (pre-treatment, post-treatment, and three follow-ups at 3, 6 and 12 months).
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Change in Fear-Avoidance Beliefs
Time Frame: five assessment periods (pre-treatment, post-treatment, and three follow-ups at 3, 6 and 12 months).
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The Fear-Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire (FABQ) will be used to measure this domain.
Is a scale composed by sixteen items developed to assess patients' beliefs and attitudes about the causes and consequences of their low back pain.
Participants rate their agreement with each statement on a 7- point Likert scale (0 = completely disagree, 6 = completely agree).
The FABQ consists of 2 subscales.
The first sub-scale is the Physical Activity subscale (FABQpa), is composed by seven items, and assesses the effects of physical activities over pain.
The second subscale is the Work subscale (FABQw) composed by four items, and it assesses the way that work activities can affect pain.
The Spanish version has shown excellent psychometrics properties.
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five assessment periods (pre-treatment, post-treatment, and three follow-ups at 3, 6 and 12 months).
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Change in Catastrophizing
Time Frame: five assessment periods (pre-treatment, post-treatment, and three follow-ups at 3, 6 and 12 months).
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The Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS) assesses the tendency to consider pain as a threat with exaggerated negative consequence to the patient.
It is a 13-item self-report scale, each item evaluate the pain experience, as an example: "I become afraid that the pain will get worse".
Participants assess the frequency that these ideas appears, on a likert-type scale ranging from 0 to 4 being 0 "not at all" and 4 "all the time".
The PCS yields a total score and three subscale scores assessing rumination, magnification and helplessness.
A high score on the total PCS score indicates a high level of catastrophizing.
The Spanish version of PCS has demonstrated adequate psychometrics properties.
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five assessment periods (pre-treatment, post-treatment, and three follow-ups at 3, 6 and 12 months).
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Change in Quality of life assessed by the SF-12 questionnaire
Time Frame: five assessment periods (pre-treatment, post-treatment, and three follow-ups at 3, 6 and 12 months).
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The SF-12 is the brief version of the 36-item Short Form Health Survey (SF-36).
The SF-12 contains items that measure each of the eight concepts included in the SF-36, namely physical functioning, role limitations due to physical health problems, bodily pain, general health, vitality (energy/fatigue), social functioning, role limitations due to emotional problems, and mental health (psychological distress and psychological well-being).
The SF-12 contains six-point scales were patients evaluated the frequency and intensity of each statement during the past month.
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five assessment periods (pre-treatment, post-treatment, and three follow-ups at 3, 6 and 12 months).
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Other Outcome Measures
Outcome Measure |
Measure Description |
Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
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Satisfaction with the treatment: The Spanish adaptation of Borkovec and Nau questionnaire
Time Frame: 12 months
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Satisfaction with the treatment: The Spanish adaptation of Borkovec and Nau questionnaire (1972) will be used.
Participants have to respond in an eleven-point scale (0 to 10) several questions about their opinion over the received treatment (for example, how logic was the treatment for them; if they are satisfied; if the treatment was useful; if they would recommend the treatment to other people).
Clinicians will also be assessed with an adapted version of the questionnaire regarding satisfaction with the treatment program.
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12 months
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Analysis of the barriers for the use of cognitive behavioral therapy and communication and information technologies in chronic low back pain treatment:
Time Frame: 12 months
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Analysis of the barriers for the use of cognitive behavioral therapy and communication and information technologies in chronic low back pain treatment: This analysis includes 3 groups of patients, resulting from the three experimental conditions, compound of 8 patients each, selected by a balanced randomization to assure variability in gender, age, educational levels and level's use of information and communication technologies.
We will apply a focus group strategy and it will be accomplished at the end of the therapy.
The focus groups will be recorded and analyzed with qualitative analysis methodology.
The clinic staff's opinion will be obtained on ad-hoc questionnaires and filled in by the clinicians.
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12 months
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Collaborators and Investigators
Sponsor
Investigators
- Principal Investigator: Julio Domenech, Md PhD, Orthopedic Surgery, Hospital Arnau de Vilanova, Valencia
Publications and helpful links
Study record dates
Study Major Dates
Study Start
Primary Completion (Anticipated)
Study Completion (Anticipated)
Study Registration Dates
First Submitted
First Submitted That Met QC Criteria
First Posted (Estimate)
Study Record Updates
Last Update Posted (Estimate)
Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria
Last Verified
More Information
Terms related to this study
Additional Relevant MeSH Terms
Other Study ID Numbers
- FIS-PI12-02710
Drug and device information, study documents
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated drug product
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated device product
product manufactured in and exported from the U.S.
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.
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