Status
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
This project aims to test a behavioral intervention in patients with liver cirrhosis and chronic pain and teach self pain-management skills.
Full description
Prescription opioid medications are a leading cause of opioid-related death and are particularly risky in patients with cirrhosis of the liver, which affects 4 million people in the US. In this population, prescription opioids are associated with complications of liver disease, decreased access to life-saving transplantation, and increased hospitalization, post-transplant mortality, and all-cause mortality. Moreover, most patients with cirrhosis have underlying alcohol and/or substance use disorders (SUDs), which increase the risk of opioid-related complications and misuse. Despite these risks, our pilot work found that nearly half of all patients with cirrhosis are prescribed opioid medications each year and that these prescriptions are often inconsistent with opioid prescribing safety guidelines. One potential reason for this may be the lack of safe, evidence-based, alternative pain management strategies for this patient population. Indeed, existing opioid safety and pain management interventions designed for general populations do not address many of the specific issues facing patients with cirrhosis.
The research team plans to recruit patients at UPMC for participation in the Liver Education About Pain (LEAP) intervention program. LEAP is a modular 12-week pain self-management intervention with individual and group sessions. Individual sessions serve the purpose of individualizing the program to the needs of the patients. Group sessions allow participants to practice skills, set goals with the group, seek social support, and learn together. The purpose of the LEAP program is to make pain better, help patients reach their personal goals (things that may be hard to do because of pain), and add to the care patients' medical team is providing.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
30 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Shari S Rogal, MD, MPH; Naudia N Jonassaint, MD, MHS
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal