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The goal of this study is to examine the effects of the Remote Electrical Neuromodulation (REN) device on adolescents ages 12-17 who have been diagnosed with New Daily Persistent Headache (NDPH). Pediatric patients with a diagnosis of new daily persistent headache are typically resistant to standard pharmacologic treatments and often experience systemic side effects related to medications; thus, REN offers the potential for an exciting new treatment option for patients with refractory headache disorders. The device delivers transcutaneous electrical stimulation to the upper arm to induce conditioned pain modulation (CPM) that activates a descending endogenous analgesic mechanism. Ultimately, the investigators hope to gain insights into the safety and efficacy of Nerivio™ for the acute treatment of NDPH in adolescents. The goal of this study is to demonstrate headache relief without unexpected device-related adverse effects
Full description
This is a research study to evaluate a new non-invasive drug-free acute treatment of headache in adolescents aged 12-17 years old. Participants are being asked to take part in this study because they suffer from persistent headaches.
Device description:
The device is a wireless wearable battery-operated stimulation unit controlled by a dedicated smartphone application. Treatments with Nerivio™ are self-administered by the user at the onset of a headache. The Nerivio™ includes several main components:
Procedures and duration of participation
Participants will receive a device and will be asked to treat headaches with it and report in the app the characteristics of the attacks at the beginning of the attack as well as at 2 hours after the treatment. The study includes 3 visits to the clinic. The investigators expect that participants will be in this research study for 8 weeks.
Why is this research study being done?
Participants are being asked to be in the study because they suffer from persistent headaches.
The Nerivio device is approved by the FDA for acute treatment of migraine with or without aura in patients 12 years of age or older. The purpose of this study is to assess the effect of the Nerivio device for treating New Daily persistent Headache (NDPH) in children. The Nerivio is a non-invasive device operated via a smartphone application that changes brain activity. The device is worn on the upper arm, and the treatment is self-administered at the headache onset. The device delivers non-painful electrical pulses to the skin that stimulate the body to initiate a pain inhibition mechanism in the brain. During the treatment, the users can adjust the intensity of the pulses according to how they tolerate it.
Marc DiSabella is the person responsible for this research study at Children's National. He is called the Principal Investigator.
What will happen in this research study?
Each participant will receive a device to be used at home for the acute treatment of their headaches. The device produces electrostimulation parameters aimed to relief headache pain. In addition, an app will be installed on the participants smartphone to control the device and record their headaches and their feedback regarding the effect of the device on their headaches.
Schedule of What the participants will do:
Enrollment Visit 1 (Day 0)
Run-in phase (Days 1-28)
Device training Visit (Day 29-37)
Treatment phase Day 1-28 following visit 2
End of study visit 3. Please arrive to Children's National Medical Center for their scheduled appointment, complete the study questionnaires, if required and return the device.
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100 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Emily McCracken; Marc DiSabella, DO
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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