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Enriched Environments in Endometriosis

P

Ponce Medical School Foundation

Status

Completed

Conditions

Inflammation Pelvic
Quality of Life
Pelvic Pain
Endometriosis
Endometriosis-related Pain

Treatments

Behavioral: Environmental enrichment

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT04179149
1R21HD098481-01

Details and patient eligibility

About

The investigators propose to conduct a randomized behavioral trial that will produce a clinically useful multi-level integrative medicine model to be used in stress- and inflammation-related disorders that can easily be implemented with current pharmacological interventions to alleviate pain and improve QoL.

Full description

Endometriosis is a chronic inflammatory and painful condition that affects 176 million women in their reproductive years worldwide, and has substantial costs related to health care and loss in work productivity. The symptoms of endometriosis-chronic, incapacitating pain and infertility-cause high levels of stress, leading to poor quality of life (QoL) in affected women. Stress is known to affect the physiology of pelvic organs and to disturb the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis leading to chronic, painful, inflammatory disorders. The team has documented a relationship between stress, HPA dysregulation and endometriosis. In an animal model the team demonstrated that stress exacerbates disease manifestations whereas the ability to control the level of stress results in smaller lesions and less inflammation. Further, the team has identified social support as one of the parameters that most significantly impacts QoL in women with endometriosis. Environmental enrichment (EE) can produce beneficial effects in models of chronic diseases improving anxiety and immune-related disturbances, and can block the effects of chronic stress on brain hippocampal integrity. The team recently found that EE can effectively minimize lesion size and numbers, and also decreased anxiety in this animal model. Together, these data support the basic premise of this proposal: EE interventions can overcome chronic stress thus reversing the negative influences on mental health status (depression/anxiety levels), inflammation/HPA axis (inflammatory cytokines, cortisol), and clinical course (pain levels) of endometriosis, leading to improved QoL. The central objective of this study is to refine and test a multi-modal intervention based on the EE paradigm tested in our animal model and translated it to the human scenario, to produce data on its effectiveness. The team hypothesizes that the EE interventions can be effectively adapted for women with endometriosis resulting in pain reduction and improved QoL. To test our hypothesis, our multidisciplinary team with combined expertise in endometriosis, psychology, physiology, neuroscience, gynecology, and stress management has adapted the experimental EE model to the human scenario. By applying a combined approach (systematic review of the literature, and input from a patient advisory committee) the team has developed six EE modules to be tested in human subjects. This study consists of two specific aims. In aim 1, the team will assess feasibility and acceptability of the EE interventions through a collaborative approach involving a patient population to refine EE modules. Under aim 2, the team will conduct a randomized clinical trial (RCT) of the EE intervention to determine its efficacy in improvement of pelvic pain and QoL (primary outcomes), and inflammation, HPA axis disturbances, and mental health (depression, anxiety) (secondary outcomes), measured before and after the intervention. With this purpose, the team will use a case control study design for the RCT where cases will receive the intervention as an adjuvant to standard gynecologic care for endometriosis, while controls will receive standard of care only. The proposed work will produce a clinically useful multi-level integrative medicine model to be used in stress- and inflammation-related disorders that can easily be implemented with current pharmacological interventions to alleviate pain and improve QoL.

Enrollment

56 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 49 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • premenopausal adult women
  • adults 18 and 49 y/o
  • diagnosed with endometriosis by surgery
  • symptomatic
  • refractory to hormonal treatment
  • able to provide written informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  • Pregnant women (or who become pregnant during the study period)
  • Asymptomatic
  • Documented visual, cognitive or physical impairment that would interfere with participation or consent.
  • Currently under mental health pharmacological treatment
  • Currently using steroid medications.
  • Diagnosis of pain syndromes (e.g., fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome).

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

56 participants in 2 patient groups

Environmental enrichment
Experimental group
Description:
Subjects randomized to the intervention condition will receive the environmental enrichment intervention (social support, open spaces, novel stress relief activities) as an adjuvant to standard gynecological care consisting of hormonal, analgesic or surgical treatment as necessary according to their symptoms during the study period.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Environmental enrichment
Controls
No Intervention group
Description:
Participants randomized to the control condition will receive only standard care as necessary according to their symptoms during the study period plus an online patient training module.

Trial documents
2

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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