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Study of Possible Changes in QST After Application of Capsaicin on Patients With Peripheral Neuropathic Pain

Kind and Duration of Possible Changes of the Sensory Profiles After the Topical Application of Capsaicin (8%) in Patients With Peripheral Neuropathic Pain

Status
Completed
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01596491
Enrollment
20
Registered
2012-05-11
Start date
2011-04-30
Completion date
2012-11-30
Last updated
2012-12-20

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Peripheral Nerve Injury, Postherpetic Neuralgia

Keywords

peripheral nerve injury, postherpetic neuralgia, PNI, PHN, Capsaicin, QST, quantitative sensory testing, sensory profile, neuropathic pain

Brief summary

The treatment of neuropathic pain ist still a challenge. A new promising therapy is the use of capsaicin on skin. The investigators first experiences with capsaicin in patients with peripheral nerve injury showed changes in the sensibility, which achieved its maximal extent after four weeks and was regressive, but not completely abolished 1,5 months after application. In this study the investigators hope to specify, how long and in which way exactly this changes in sensibility appear.

Detailed description

The topical application of a high dosage of capsaicin (8%) is a new promising approach. There is only little knowledge about the extent and the duration of drug-induced changes of detection and pain thresholds based on a currently recommended standardized quantitative sensory testing (QST). The assessment of QST changes would be an important step forward to understand the way of action as well as the time course of the presumed recovering of the C-fiber function after topical application of a high concentration capsaicin patch. 10 patients suffering from peripheral neuropathic pain due to peripheral nerve injury and 10 patients suffering from postherpetic neuralgia will be investigated by QST following the protocol of DFNS (German Research Network on Neuropathic Pain), using both thermal and mechanical nociceptive as well as non-nociceptive stimuli. QST will be performed at the following times: * at baseline * 2, 4, 6, 8 weeks later, and every two weeks at least until re-occurrence of pain and/or recovering of the capsaicin-induced worsening of the C-fiber function.

Interventions

with QST the small-fibre function is tested by registering thermal and mechanical thresholds, so that changes in the sensory profile can by specified

Sponsors

Ruhr University of Bochum
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Observational model
COHORT
Time perspective
PROSPECTIVE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* age \>18 years with signed informed consent * with planned topical application of capsaicin (8%) and with no involvement in any other study * with neurological proved peripheral neuropathy (e.g. peripheral nerve lesion, postherpetic neuralgia) and with remaining moderate pain intensity under the current treatment (\> NRS 3; numeric rating scale 0-10) * some remaining sensory function at the baseline QST with z-scores ≥ - 3 for cold, warmth and tactile thresholds

Exclusion criteria

* with missing informed consent * with any contraindications for capsaicin application * with diabetes mellitus, * using lidocaine patch in the test area in the last 6 months before enrollment * with inadequate knowledge of the german language

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Duration of the functional loss of the C- and A-delta-fibres after therapeutic application of capsaicin 8% as measured by the impairment of the thermal thresholds8 weeks after capsaicin-patch (8%) applicationmeasurement of thermal detection thresholds for warmth (WDT) and cold (CDT) by QST (standard DFNS protocol), change of z-values for WDT and CDT from baseline to 8 weeks after capsaicin-application (ANOVA)
Extent of the functional loss of the C- and A-delta-fibres after therapeutic application of capsaicin 8% as measured by the impairment of the thermal thresholds8 weeks after capsaicin-patch (8%) applicationmeasurement of thermal detection thresholds for warmth (WDT) and cold (CDT) by QST (standard DFNS protocol), change of z-values for WDT and CDT from baseline to 8 weeks after capsaicin-application (ANOVA)

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Decrease of thermal Hyperalgesia8 weeks after capsaicin-patch (8%) applicationchange of thermal hyperalgesia measured by QST (z-value of heat pain and cold pain threshold)from baseline to 8 weeks after capsaicin-application
Decrease of mechanical hyperalgesia8 weeks after capsaicin-patch (8%) applicationchange of mechanical hyperalgesia measured by QST (z-value of mechanical pain threshold and mechanical pain sensitivity) from baseline to 8 weeks after capsaicin-application
Decrease of dynamical mechanical allodynia8 weeks after capsaicin-patch (8%) applicationchange of dynamical mechanical allodynia measured by QST from baseline to 8 weeks after capsaicin-application
Correlation of efficacy on the sensory function and the reported soothing of symptoms after capsaicin-application8 weeks after application of capsaicin-patch (8%)comparison of z-values for cold, warmth and mechanical detection threshold to the outcome of the german versions of the following questionnaires: PainDETECT, NPSI (Neuropathic Pain Symptom Inventory) and Patient's global impression of change (PGIC), analyzed by ANCOVA

Countries

Germany

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026