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New Approaches in Evaluating Patients' Response to Botulinum Toxins in the Treatment of Chronic Neck Pain and Back Pain

V

VA Connecticut Healthcare System

Status and phase

Unknown
Phase 1

Conditions

Cervicalgia
Low Back Pain

Treatments

Drug: Botulinum Toxins

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

This protocol is a prospective, open label, pilot study examining the utility of three established pain questionnaires (the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS), Neck Disability Index (NDI), the Oswestry Low Back Pain Questionnaire and two novel pain scale devised by the PI) as well as their relationship to three novel quantitative tools to measure the effect of botulinum toxin injections for neck pain and back pain. The three novel methods for measuring neurotoxin effect are: muscle twitch patterns using surface electromyography (sEMG), cervical and lumbar range of motion using a neck and low back inclinometer, and skin surface temperature readings using an infrared imaging camera.

Full description

Botulinum toxins are a well-established group of neurotoxins that have a wide variety of FDA approved clinical uses including muscle relaxation, headache prevention and bladder control. Despite the abundance of anecdotal evidence supporting their use in pain management, double blind placebo control studies examining the efficacy of botulinum toxins in the treatment of chronic neck and back pain have reported mixed findings. Several smaller studies have shown significantly positive outcomes while other studies have found no efficacy of neurotoxins compared to placebo. The existing literature reveals that most negative outcome studies were based on the Visual Analogue Scale, which is a purely subjective measure. We propose a more objective set of measures that might better reflect patients' deficits and levels of discomfort.

Our proposal is a prospective, open-label, pilot study that will examine chronic neck and back pain among veterans. Our primary specific aim is to test three novel methods for evaluating clinical deficits in patients who have chronic neck and back pain: electromyographical (EMG) activity (primary outcome) and cervical/lumbar range of motion (CROM & LROM) (primary outcome) as well as skin surface temperature (thermography) (secondary outcome). Our hypothesis is that most patients with chronic neck and back pain significantly from sustained muscle spasms. As a result, patients may exhibit surplus EMG activity in affected areas due to spontaneous muscle twitch. And consequently, they may show signs of decreased range of motion due to increased muscle tone. They may also experience a rise in skin surface temperature due to excess heat production from sustained muscle contraction. We will measure these three phenomena using three different biophysical measurement tools. Electromyographic data will be collected with a surface EMG device, and cervical and lumbar range of motion with a gravity inclinometer. Skin surface temperature will be assessed with a medical grade digital thermography camera.

The second specific aim of this study is to examine the efficacy of botulinum toxins in reversing the anomalies in the above measured parameters: to reduce excessive electromyographic activity, to increase range of motion in cervical and lumbar joints and to reduce elevated skin surface temperature. We will measure outcomes of 60 study subjects (30 for neck pain and 30 for low back pain) who will all be treated once with botulinum toxins and then followed up at 1 month, 2 months and 3 months. We will also correlate our findings with the more commonly used pain and function scales: the Visual Analogue Scale, Neck Disability Index and the Oswestry Low Back Pain Scale.

Enrollment

60 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 85 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Veterans with chronic neck or back pain for at least 6 months.
  • No botulinum toxin injections in the last 6 months.

Exclusion criteria

  • Non-muscular neck or back pain

  • Signs or symptoms of nerve root or spinal cord injury

  • History of adverse events associated with botulinum toxin injections

  • Major neurological disorder

    • recent stroke
    • myasthenia gravis
    • muscular dystrophy
    • myotonic dystrophy
    • amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
  • Unstable cardiac or pulmonary disease

  • Pregnancy

  • Severe psychiatric illness, dementia or delirium

  • Excessive obesity

  • Severe spinal curvature (i.e. severe scoliosis or severe kyphosis)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

60 participants in 1 patient group

botulinum toxin injected
Experimental group
Description:
Because this is an open label study, all subjects will receive one of two botulinum toxins based on their symptoms. Those will cervicalgia will receive Botox (botulinum toxin A) and those with lumbago or low back pain will receive Myobloc (botulinum toxin B)
Treatment:
Drug: Botulinum Toxins

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Hajime A Tokuno, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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