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Building Adaptive Coping and Knowledge to Improve Daily Life (Back2Life)

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Emory University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Sickle Cell Disease

Treatments

Behavioral: Back2Life

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT04602728
STUDY00000573
1K23HL133457 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
R03HL164333 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to find out how teenagers with chronic pain and sickle cell disease respond to a new training program called Back2Life and get their feedback about how to modify the program to best fit their needs. The Back2Life training program focuses on teaching pain coping skills (also known as cognitive-behavioral therapy). The program teaches skills and strategies that may help teens improve chronic pain management and get back into their everyday activities.

Full description

Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a genetic disorder of the hemoglobin in which the course of acute pain from vaso-occlusion and its sequelae vary widely across genotypes and individual patients. SCD pain often begins during childhood and can progress to chronic pain for approximately 23% of children and adolescents. Youth with chronic SCD pain, that is pain that is present on most days per month and persists for at least 6 months, report high levels of functional disability, elevated depressive and anxiety symptoms, and reduced quality of life relative to youth with SCD without chronic pain. The complex, multifactorial nature of chronic SCD pain can also contribute to increased healthcare utilization for pain. The most effective management and treatment of chronic SCD pain likely requires individualized, multimodal, multidisciplinary treatments that go beyond pharmacological management alone. A range of evidence-based non-pharmacological treatments, such as behavioral health, complementary, and integrative health approaches, are recommended for chronic pain management and are gaining greater awareness and integration into comprehensive chronic pain care.

Behavioral health treatment, such as cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for pain, focuses on improved daily functioning and coping through several core treatment components such as psychoeducation about how the body processes pain, relaxation skills training, and cognitive strategies. Youth with chronic SCD pain need an evidence-based, culturally informed, adaptive treatment. Behavioral treatments that are tailored to patient and family needs are beneficial when patients may require different levels of care. Adaptive designs are more effective in improving health outcomes, satisfaction with treatment, and reducing healthcare use than standard protocols where patients receive a fixed "one size fits all" treatment that is not personalized to their needs; adaptive designs are also recommended for tailoring evidence-based interventions with culturally diverse populations. Adaptive treatments can integrate evidence-based strategies to address common co-morbid problems associated with chronic pain, such as elevated anxiety or depressive symptoms or sleep disturbance. Teaching parents problem-solving skills can reduce caregiver stress among families managing chronic pain and illness.

This study utilizes an adaptive behavioral treatment to target psychosocial risk factors for youth with chronic SCD pain as a first step towards developing a stepped care model for SCD pain. The proposed treatment, called Back2Life, is innovative because it is culturally informed by families' and patients' feedback regarding their treatment preferences and targets psychological co-morbidities that are often excluded in clinical trials. The overarching hypothesis driving the proposed intervention is that disrupting the complex interacting psychosocial factors that can exacerbate chronic SCD pain will prevent and/or reduce poor health outcomes in children and adolescents with SCD. Reductions in inflammatory biomarkers are examined as an exploratory hypothesis and participants can consent to an optional blood draw for this portion of the study.

Enrollment

40 patients

Sex

All

Ages

10 to 18 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria for Youth:

  • diagnosed with SCD (any genotype)
  • report chronic pain
  • speak and read English
  • have not initiated new disease modifying-treatments (e.g, hydroxyurea, Endari, voxelotor, crizanlizumab, chronic transfusions) or significantly increased dosages of any disease-modifying treatments in the past 3 months

Inclusion Criteria for Parents or Caregivers:

  • speak and read English

Exclusion Criteria for Youth:

  • have comorbid medical conditions typically associated with pain but unrelated to SCD (e.g., rheumatologic disorders or inflammatory bowel disease)
  • are receiving chronic transfusion indicated for central nervous system risks and/or complications, previous overt strokes, or significant cognitive or developmental limitations, as per their healthcare provider or parent, that would impair completion of self-report measures or engagement in treatment sessions
  • received ≥ 3 sessions of outpatient psychological therapy for pain management in the 6 months prior to screening

Exclusion Criteria for Parents or Caregivers:

  • have significant cognitive limitations or severe psychiatric conditions, as per the child's healthcare team or history, that would impair completion of self-report measures or engagement in treatment sessions

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

40 participants in 1 patient group

Back2Life Program
Experimental group
Description:
Youth with chronic SCD pain and their parents or caregivers receiving an adaptive cognitive behavioral treatment program for pain coping skills.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Back2Life

Trial documents
2

Trial contacts and locations

3

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Central trial contact

Soumitri Sil, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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