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This study will comprehensively investigate the insula as a brain target for neuromodulation to treat chronic neuropathic pain.
Full description
In the first stage, 12 subjects with refractory neuropathic pain will be enrolled to an inpatient clinical trial for insular brain mapping with acute stimulation and neurophysiological brain monitoring. Electrodes for stimulation and recording will be implanted stereotactically along the anterior-posterior axis of the insular cortex. 'Responders' to trial stimulation and the optimal region of the insula for pain relief will be identified during this inpatient stage.
'Responder' subjects who have positive analgesic effects from acute insular stimulation during the first stage will continue to the second stage. The second stage, clinical trial is conducted outpatient and will test chronic deep brain stimulation of the insula. The study design is randomized, sham-stimulation-controlled, double-blinded, and cross-over where subjects receive both active and sham stimulation. Furthermore, neurophysiological biomarkers of pain will be investigated by studying changes in neural activity.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Men and women, between 18 and 80 years, inclusive
Subjects who are able and willing to give consent and able to attend all study visits
The pain is:
The pain is neuropathic or predominantly neuropathic if mixed components.
Insula region must be apparent on MRI so that direct targeting can be performed for SEEG and DBS electrode placement.
Able to communicate and report sensations during all stimulation testing
Stable prescribed doses of all symptomatic pain medications for 30 days prior to study entry and for the duration of the study.
Inclusion and exclusion criteria have been agreed upon by the principal investigator and the pain psychologist, both of whom have interviewed, examined and if appropriate provided psychotherapeutic intervention to the subject.
Exclusion criteria
Idiopathic pain syndromes will be excluded. Examples include:
Subjects deemed poor candidates by a multidisciplinary team of pain clinicians including specialists in neurosurgery, pain management, and pain psychology:
Subjects with active psychiatric illness will be excluded. For the purpose of this study, active psychiatric illness includes:
Subjects with unstable cardiac status including:
Severe hypertension (diastolic BP > 100 on medication)
Subjects with standard contraindications for MR imaging such as non-MRI compatible implanted metallic devices including cardiac pacemakers, size limitations, etc.
On medications that increases the bleeding risk, based on the published guidelines41 which are currently recognized by the American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine, American Academy of Pain Medicine and the North American Neuromodulation Society; specifically:
Individuals who are not able or willing to tolerate prolonged hospitalization with continuous video EEG monitoring
Subjects participating or have participated in another clinical trial to investigate or treat chronic pain in the last 30 days
Subjects with risk factors for intraoperative or postoperative bleeding from a documented coagulopathy or if their serum coagulation studies (platelet count, PT, PTT, and INR) exceed the institutional laboratory limits.
Subjects with brain tumors or any significant intracranial mass.
Subjects with a history of seizure
Any illness that in the investigator's opinion preclude participation in this study
Pregnancy or lactation
Subjects with a true allergy to opioid medications which would preclude PET imaging
Legal incapacity or limited legal capacity
Subjects with a deep brain stimulation implant
History of hemorrhagic stroke or cerebrovascular event within the past year of treatment exhibiting incomplete resolution
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
12 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Zak Sturgill; Judy Beenhakker
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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