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Mindfulness Meditation for Chronic Pelvic Pain Management (MEMPHIS)

Q

Queen Mary University of London

Status

Completed

Conditions

Chronic Pelvic Pain

Treatments

Behavioral: Mindfulness meditation
Behavioral: Relaxation app

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02721108
010817QM
10925965 (Registry Identifier)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Chronic pelvic pain (CPP) in women is common, painful and disabling and puts much strain on women's lives and the (National Health Service) NHS.

CPP may be related to internal organs, the nervous system or psychological factors and is often difficult to treat. Surgery and drugs have risks and side effects, are expensive and do not help all patients.

Psychological treatments have potential to improve CPP but are not consistently available. Mindfulness meditation teaches people to accept their sensations and emotions in the present moment. This can help to accept pain better, which enables patients to focus on daily activities and improve their quality of life. It has been shown to help in headache, back pain and depression. Usually mindfulness meditation is taught by attending courses for 8 weeks.

The investigators want to find out in a full-scale trial if mindfulness meditation, taught by using a smartphone app, can help CPP patients.

In preparation for this full-scale study the investigators will conduct the MEMPHIS study to answer the following questions:

  • How many patients are willing to participate?

  • How often they use the app?

  • Reasons for not wanting to participate/not using the app -

    • Which health questionnaires are the most useful ones?
  • How many patients will be required for the full-scale trial?

Patients will receive the usual treatment and be divided into three groups

  • using a 60-day mindfulness meditation app,

    -- using comparison app with progressive muscle relaxation but no meditation

  • no app

Patients will complete health questionnaires, may be asked to comment in a focus group and record pain, medication changes, surgery and emergency medical visits

Full description

CPP affects up to 24% women worldwide accounts for 20% of UK gynaecological clinic referrals and has a considerable impact on patients' quality of life and their income. CPP costs the NHS € 3.3bn per year. Despite costly interventions CPP is often resistant to surgical and medical treatment. Multifactorial psychological and somatic causes require a multidimensional approach. Psychological and somatic causes require a multidimensional approach, which is not routinely offered in gynaecology clinics.

Randomized Control Trial (RCT-) evidence suggests that primary inclusion of psychological interventions may be superior to primary surgery. Although psychological treatment is provided across the NHS, mostly in the context of primary care Improving Access to Psychological

Therapies there are problems with capacity, waiting times and overall number of patients being able to access services. Alternatively, patient self-management (PSM) is now recognised as a tool empowering patients to cope better with their condition.

Mindfulness meditation is a potentially valuable PSM tool in CPP.

The investigators conducted a systematic search of literature (07/2013, updated 12/2013) and found no RCTs on mindfulness meditation in CPP. However, two small pilot trials, one in CPP and one in endometriosis patients with promising results.

The investigators decided to undertake a systematic review on the effect of mindfulness meditation and extend the search to other chronic pain conditions (e.g. back pain, headache, fibromyalgia and diabetic neuropathy) because previous systematic reviews had number of limitations, such as not reporting effect size. Two independent reviewers assessed the risk of bias systematically using Review Manager (RevMan) 5.2 software. Out of 472 citations 9 RCTs were finally included. Most studies were of moderate quality; sample sizes were generally small.

Mindfulness meditation had positive effects on depression in chronic pain patients (SMD -0.28; 95%CI -0.53, -0.03; p = 0.03). A trend in reduction of anxiety and affective pain and a trend towards better QUOL, especially the mental health component and better pain acceptance was observed. Only one of the included studies reported the important measure of pain acceptance. If a larger sample size had been available it would have been likely that this and other health outcomes would have shown significant improvements, as was seen in depression (which was studied on n=259 patients), rather than trends. It is the investigators intention to add results to the body of research from a future full-scale trial.

Currently Mindfulness-based treatment is creating lively research interest. Two recent systematic reviews report positive effects on somatisation disorders and psychological stress. Although there is no ongoing study on patients with CPP, other chronic diseases with strong psychological components of depression and anxiety such as COPD and the RFPB-funded pilot study PATHWAYS on Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension are underway.

Of particular interest, due to the similarities in study design to MEMPHIS, is a recently closed pilot study, MIMS (UKCRN ID 13105) that investigated adjustment to multiple sclerosis.

In MIMS meditation teaching was delivered by videoconference. Web-based delivery has also been explored and shown to be feasible for reducing stress, anxiety and depression; both options are lacking the flexibility of a smartphone app, which is being proposed. There is evolving work on care pathways through primary secondary and tertiary levels for patients with CPP and recently mindfulness meditation has been introduced in Dorset, albeit delivered face-to-face. This could be replaced by cheaper and more flexible app-delivered meditation training.

This study will address the knowledge gaps and provide by:

  1. Providing feasibility data for a large multicentre RCT aimed at rigorously testing Mindfulness meditation in CPP
  2. Establishing whether this app could be seamlessly integrated into CPP pathways

Enrollment

90 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Women with diagnosis of organic and non-organic chronic pelvic pain (CPP) for six months or more
  • Age ≥ 18 years
  • Be capable of understanding the information provided, with use of an interpreter if required and being able to understand simple English as is used in the app

Exclusion criteria

  • Males
  • Absence of diagnosis of organic and non-organic chronic pelvic pain (CPP)
  • Diagnosis of organic and non-organic chronic pelvic pain (CPP) lasting for less than 3 months
  • Age < 18 years
  • No access to a Personal computer or smart phone
  • Unable to speak / understand English
  • Current users of the app content available to the public

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Quadruple Blind

90 participants in 3 patient groups

Mindfulness: Group A
Experimental group
Description:
Using a 60-day mindfulness instruction meditation app: 60 days of 10 and 20 minute long app modules with a spoken guide to mindfulness meditation, to be used once a day, including modules on the basics of mindfulness and a module targeted to pain, which can re-revisited until the end of the study
Treatment:
Behavioral: Mindfulness meditation
Relaxation: Group B
Active Comparator group
Description:
Using comparison relaxation app with a series of non-meditative progressive muscle relaxation instructions: 60 days of 10 and 20 minute long app modules to be used once per day with spoken words and relaxing sounds, which can re-revisited until the end of the study
Treatment:
Behavioral: Relaxation app
Treatment as usual: Group C
No Intervention group
Description:
No app: treatment as usual (watch and wait, medication and/or surgery) to investigate if any app intervention makes a difference to wellbeing and to ascertain dropout rates for the full-scale trial in patients who perceive that they are getting no intervention.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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