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About
Three-arm randomized controlled trial, of Motivational Interviewing and guided Opioid Tapering support (MI-Opioid Taper) and tizanidine vs. MI-Opioid Taper and placebo vs. enhanced usual care to promote postoperative opioid cessation and pain cessation and reduce the incidence of postoperative opioid misuse among patients undergoing spine surgery.
Full description
In this Type 1 hybrid effectiveness-implementation three-arm parallel RCT, 375 patients with preoperative LTOU undergoing spine surgery will be recruited across 4 sites (Stanford, Harvard, Wake Forest, U. of Kansas) and randomized to 1 of 3 groups (MI-Opioid Taper and tizanidine, MI-Opioid Taper and placebo, enhanced usual care) and followed for 12 months. The primary outcome is time to baseline opioid use. Secondary outcomes are time to opioid cessation, opioid dispensing cessation, pain cessation, and risk of postoperative opioid misuse. We will examine motivation for change, change talk, and reduction in pain as mediators of treatment effects and characterize treatment interactions with participant attributes in predicting both treatment engagement and efficacy. A mixed-methods evaluation using the RE-AIM framework will explore barriers and facilitators to future larger-scale implementation of MI-Opioid Taper. The project will address the unmet needs of patients on long-term opioid use presenting for surgery in need of precision postoperative pain care to minimize opioid-related harms.
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Inclusion criteria
Adults aged 18-64 scheduled for elective spine surgery for lumbar or cervical degenerative disease (e.g. lumbar or cervical disc herniation, lumbar or cervical spinal stenosis, lumbar or cervical degenerative spondylolisthesis, lumbar or cervical disc degeneration, or degenerative cervical myelopathy including cervical spondylotic myelopathy).
Current Opioid Misuse Measure (COMM) score greater than or equal to 9 Answering "Yes" to any of the following items on the modified Brief Pain Inventory (BPI)1) Over the past 24 hours have you needed to take your pain medication to help you sleep; 2)Have you taken any pain medications for any reason other than your pain, such as to reduce anxiety or improve mood? 3) Have you taken more pain medication than was prescribed to you in the past 24 hours? Score of greater than or equal to 2 on any Tobacco, Alcohol, Prescription medication, and other Substance use (TAPS-1) item Positive Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT-C) score (greater than or equal to 4 for men, greater than or equal to 3 for women)
Exclusion criteria
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375 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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