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ED Physical Therapy for Acute Low Back Pain

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Northwestern University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Low Back Pain

Treatments

Other: ED Physical Therapy
Other: Usual Care

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT04921449
R01HS027426

Details and patient eligibility

About

Emergency department (ED)-initiated physical therapy is a rapidly growing resource and represents a promising treatment approach to low back pain. This clinical trial will evaluate an innovative model of an emergency department "embedded" physical therapist to treat patients with acute low back pain, with a focus on improving patient functioning and reducing opioid use.

Full description

Low back pain represents a significant health care burden in the United States and accounts for nearly four million emergency department (ED) visits per year. In nearly two thirds of these visits, an opioid medication is administered or prescribed, making low back pain the most common reason for which opioids are prescribed. Despite this aggressive medication-based approach, patient outcomes after an ED visit for back pain remain poor: after three months, nearly half of all patients report persistent functional impairment, and one in five patients report continued opioid use.

ED-initiated physical therapy (ED-PT) is a promising new resource to improve patient care for low back pain. A growing number of EDs now have dedicated physical therapists that evaluate and treat patients through a combination of education, prognostic guidance, and early mobilization and exercise. Preliminary data indicate that patients receiving ED-PT, compared to usual care, report more rapid functional improvement and use fewer opioids. However, these observational data are limited by biases in treatment selection due to physician discretion in which patients receive ED-PT, as well as other measured and unmeasured confounders.

To more rigorously evaluate the efficacy of ED-PT for acute low back pain, the investigators will conduct a single-center physician-randomized trial of an embedded physical therapy intervention (NEED-PT) versus usual care in ED patients with acute low back pain, comparing a primary outcome of pain-related functioning and a secondary outcome of opioid use at the primary endpoint of three months.

Enrollment

360 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age ≥ 18 years
  • Low back pain (originating between 12th rib and buttocks)
  • Symptom duration ≤ 30 days (current episode)
  • Evaluated by a physician randomized to either study arm
  • Evaluated when ED physical therapy is available (e.g., Mon-Fri, 8am-4pm)
  • Likely to be discharged home (based on physician assessment)
  • Ability to complete follow-up data collection electronically or by telephone
  • English-speaking

Exclusion criteria

  • Chronic low back pain or prior lumbar surgery
  • Serious red-flag signs/symptoms (bladder/bowel incontinence, saddle anesthesia, debilitating motor weakness)
  • Obvious non-musculoskeletal etiology for low back pain (e.g., shingles, kidney stone)
  • Other concomitant injuries or pain (e.g., closed head injury, shoulder pain)
  • Unable to ambulate at baseline
  • Known pregnancy, under police custody, unable to consent

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

360 participants in 2 patient groups

Embedded ED Physical Therapy (NEED-PT)
Experimental group
Description:
An ED physical therapist will be embedded with the primary treatment team to evaluate patients presenting with low back pain at the beginning of the overall treatment course. The physical therapist will utilize a clinical protocol (NEED-PT) that matches the patient's history and exam findings to an appropriate treatment classification consisting of directional preference exercises, manual traction, stabilization exercises, non-thrust manipulation/mobilization, and/or psychologically informed rehabilitation. The NEED-PT intervention will supplement any usual care performed by the treating physician.
Treatment:
Other: ED Physical Therapy
Usual Care
Other group
Description:
Usual care consists of any ED testing or treatment not involving an ED physical therapist in accordance with the treating physician's usual and customary practice. This could include diagnostic imaging, patient education and reassurance, and administration and/or prescribing of analgesic medications.
Treatment:
Other: Usual Care

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Howard S Kim, MD MS

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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