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About
The purpose of this study is to determine the test dose of pamidronate for treatment of low back pain in terms of safety, tolerability, and pain relief.
Full description
Chronic low back pain-an enormous clinical problem which affects large segments of populations throughout the world-causes disability and loss of productivity, and leads to enormous costs in healthcare resources. Efforts to find relatively non-invasive therapies for individuals suffering from this problem are important.
The main objective of this single-center, double-blind study is to determine the optimal dosing regimen-based on safety, tolerability, and pain relief- which should be used in planning a future, large-scale, clinical study to clarify conclusively whether chronic low back pain, unrelated to cancer, can be treated with pamidronate.
Forty-four persons will be recruited for participation. There will be four study groups, each with 7 subjects randomly assigned to pamidronate and 4 to placebo. The dosage for the pamidronate participants will be 30 mg of pamidronate for the first group, 60 mg for the second group, and 90 mg for the third group. Members of the fourth group will receive 2 treatments of 90mg IV pamidronate or placebo.
In this study, scientists also hope to find out if the effectiveness of pamidronate can be predicted with bone scans (a procedure used to see bone inflammation or injuries to the bone), and if improvement in performance of daily tasks is related to the amount of pamidronate a participant receives and to improvement in pain intensity, and to evaluate patient satisfaction with the pamidronate treatments.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Prior back surgery
Compression fracture(s)
Cancer that can be a possible cause of the back pain
MRI evidence of frank disk herniation or any other abnormality or pathology (other than disc degeneration and vertebral changes consistent with the diagnosis of degenerative disc disease or spondylotic disease of the spine) regarding the probable cause of the patient's spinal pain; for example, arachnoiditis, moderate to severe spinal canal stenosis, lateral recess stenosis, congenital malformation of the spine, spinal nerve tumor, etc.
Clinical diagnosis of relevant radiculopathic / neuropathic pain with leg pain, i.e., subjects with low back pain with distal radiation of pain (below the knee) if their leg pain component is more than 50% than their back pain component, or subjects with back pain with neurological deficits consistent with lumbosacral radiculopathy (upon examination)
Presumptive compression of a spinal nerve root or fracture of a pars interarticularis (3) Spondylolisthesis (greater than grade one or more than 4 mm)
A history of hypocalcemia
Abnormal lab values:
A history of significant cardiac, hematological, renal, hepatic, metabolic, endocrinological, or neurological disease
An allergy to bisphosphonates
Leukopenia or thrombocytopenia
Being pregnant or nursing
Diagnosis of painful polyneuropathy, e.g., painful diabetic neuropathy
Psychotic symptoms. Dr. Barry Snow, the study consulting psychologist, will train study staff to recognize these symptoms.
Alcohol abuse or illicit drug use
Receiving Worker's Compensation, or having a pending Worker's Compensation claim
Being blind, deaf, or mute, or having a physical or mental handicap that impedes administration of instruments that will provide outcome data
Weighing less than 45 kg (this is rare for an adult)
Subjects who are suicidal according to the Beck Depression Inventory, or score 26 and above on the Beck Depression Inventory will be excluded from the study.
Prior pamidronate treatment
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
44 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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