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Predictive Factors for LBP Interventional Treatment Outcomes

Prospective, Observational Study Evaluating the Ability of Clinical Factors to Predict Interventional Treatment Outcomes for Low Back Pain (LBP)

Status
Completed
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02329951
Enrollment
346
Registered
2015-01-01
Start date
2014-12-31
Completion date
2021-12-31
Last updated
2021-12-09

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

Conditions

Low Back Pain, Lumbar Radiculopathy

Brief summary

In this study, we are attempting to determine which factors are associated with interventional treatment outcome for LBP (and to what extent). Up to 346 patients with LBP who are considered to be good candidates for therapeutic interventional procedures will be given a complete history and physical exam, which includes the assessment of Waddell signs, and querying them regarding factors shown in non-interventional studies or retrospective studies evaluating interventional treatments to be associated with negative treatment outcomes. These factors include the presence of Waddell and other physical exam signs, opioid use, allergies, psychopathology, concomitant pain conditions, a 6-point Likert scale on expectations, sleep abnormalities, secondary gain (e.g. medical board or litigation), procedure-related pain including from a 1 ml standardized injection, obesity, and smoking history. They will then proceed to undergo their scheduled intervention, which will be limited to epidural steroid injections (ESI), facet blocks and if positive, radiofrequency denervation, and sacroiliac (SI) joint injections. A positive outcome will be defined as 2-point or greater decrease in average pain score at 1-month and a score of \> 3 on a 1-5 Likert satisfaction scale. Those with a positive outcome at 1-month will remain in the study and be followed again at 3-months.

Detailed description

This will be an observational study with a 3-month follow-up. The course of clinical treatment will be decided by a physician independent of the research. Besides filling out questionnaires and standardized follow-up visits, all subjects will receive the same care they would if they did not participate in the study. The study will be discussed with the subjects and they will be enrolled in the study after it is determined that they meet selection criteria and are scheduled for one of the above injections. They will then fill out 3 questionnaires (Oswestery disability index, Athens insomnia scale, QIDS SR-16. All procedures will be performed with fluoroscopy. Following each procedure, the procedure-related pain will be reported on a 0-10 scale (all patients will receive as much 1% lidocaine local anesthetic as is necessary), including the reported pain to the standardized skin wheal at the start of the procedure. Patients will then receive standardized epidural steroid injections (transforaminal or interlaminar), sacroiliac joint injections, or facet blocks and radiofrequency denervation if they experience a positive block. Details about these procedures are available upon request. No patients will be permitted additional interventions between the time of their procedure and follow-up visits. Rescue medications will be in the form of either tramadol, NSAIDs or if the patient is on opioids, a \< 20% increase in dose. The first follow-up visit will be scheduled 1 month from the start of treatment for ESI and SI joint patients, and 1 month after RF denervation in positive diagnostic facet block responders. In those facet block patients who obtain prolonged relief from the diagnostic medial branch block, follow-up will be 1 month after the block (these patients may proceed to have denervation if their pain recurs after 1 month but before their final 3-month follow-up, and their 3-month follow-up will be 3 months after their medial branch block). A positive outcome will be defined as a greater or equal to 2-point decrease in average LBP (or leg pain for those who underwent an ESI) coupled with a positive satisfaction rating (\> 3 on a 5-point scale). Subjects who obtain a positive outcome at their initial 1-month follow-up visit will remain in the study and return for the final 3-month follow-up visit. Those with a negative outcome will exit the study per protocol to receive standard care, which may consist of other injections or non-rescue medications such as antidepressants and anticonvulsants. Subjects who obtain a positive outcome at 1-month but experience a recurrence before their 3-month follow-up visit will also exit the study per protocol, with their final outcome measures recorded before they receive standard care. In those who receive ESI, a smaller parallel study will be done evaluating the association between allergies and outcome. Allergies will be categorized as immunologically based or not.

Interventions

PROCEDUREFacet intervention

Diagnostic block of the nerves innervation the lumbar facet joint. If this block is positive (greater or equal to 50% relief), the participant will proceed to radiofrequency nerve ablation when the pain returns

Injection of steroid and local anesthetic into SI joint

Transforaminal or interlaminar injection of steroid epidurally

Sponsors

Walter Reed National Military Medical Center
CollaboratorFED
Landstuhl Regional Medical Center
CollaboratorFED
Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences
CollaboratorFED
Johns Hopkins University
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

1. Age \> 18 years; 2. Pain duration \> 6 weeks; 3. Low back pain presumed to be secondary to herniated disc or spinal stenosis (e.g. radiculopathy), facet joint pain or SI joint pain; 4. For ESI, patients must have leg pain \>/= 4/10 or comparable or greater than back pain, along with concordant MRI findings; for SI joint injections, patients must have tenderness overlying the SI joint; for facet joint pain, they must have paraspinal tenderness; 5. Patient agrees to have ESI, facet blocks or SI joint injection for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes; 6. Average pain score \>/= 4/10 over the past week

Exclusion criteria

1. Previous ESI, facet blocks or SI joint injection within the past 2 years; 2. Active inflammatory spondyloarthropathy (e.g. ankylosing spondylitis); 3. Previous surgery for ESI or facet block; 4. Untreated coagulopathy; 5. Allergy to contrast dye, bupivacaine or depomethylprednisolone; 6. Pregnancy; 7. Cannot read or understand English.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Mean reduction in average pain score1 month0-10 numerical rating scale for leg pain (ESI) or low back pain (facet procedure or sacroiliac joint injection). Higher scores indicate more pain.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Worst back pain score3 months0-10 numerical rating scale for back pain. Higher scores indicate more pain.
Average back pain score1 month0-10 numerical rating scale for back pain. Higher scores indicate more pain.
Average leg pain score1 month0-10 numerical rating scale for leg pain for ESI only. Higher scores indicate more pain.
Oswestry disability index score1 month0-100% score measuring function for back and/ leg pain (higher scores indicate worse function)
Worst leg pain score3 months0-10 numerical rating scale for leg pain ESI only. Higher scores indicate more pain.
Medication reduction1 monthCessation of non-opioid analgesic or \> 20% change in opioids (yes or no)
Athens Insomnia Scale1 month0-24 point scale measuring sleep quality (higher scores indicate greater sleep dysfunction)
Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (QIDS-SR 16)1 month0-48 point scale measuring symptoms of depression (higher scores indicate greater depressive symptoms)
Positive outcome1 monthGreater or equal to 2-point change in back pain (facet procedure or sacroiliac joint injection) or leg pain (ESI) plus \> 3 score on the 1-5 satisfaction scale. This is either yes or no.
Satisfaction score1 month5-point Likert scale measuring satisfaction (higher scores indicate greater satisfaction)

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 13, 2026