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Opioid Taper Study

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University of Pennsylvania

Status

Completed

Conditions

Chronic Pain

Treatments

Other: Opioid Taper Pain perception

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT03912298
831447
1R21DA046364-01A1 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to determine the effect of opioid taper on pain sensitivity in patients with chronic pain. In a well-characterized sample of men and women with chronic neuropathic pain on high-dose opioid therapy, experimental pain responses (cold-pressor, quantitative sensory testing) will be serially described over the course of and following an individualized opioid taper. In addition, functional improvements and subject-level predictors of response will be described.

Full description

The overall Specific Aim of this proposal is to determine the effect of opioid taper on pain sensitivity in patients with chronic pain. Specifically, in a well-characterized sample of men and women with chronic neuropathic pain and receiving high-dose opioid therapy (>100mg morphine equivalents/day [MED]), experimental pain responses will be serially described over the course of an individualized opioid taper to a safer dose of 90mg MED for up to 12 months. Changes will be inspected within-subject over time, and pain perception will be measured with two valid and reliable experimental pain induction techniques commonly used to measure OIH (cold-pressor, quantitative sensory testing); in addition, related functional improvements and subject-level predictors of response will be described.

Hypothesis 1. Subjects undergoing opioid taper will have improved pain responses over time compared to within-subject baseline as measured by cold-pressor and quantitative sensory pain testing.

Hypothesis 2. Improvements in experimental pain responses will be positively related to improved functional outcomes compared to within-subject baseline as measured by the PROMIS physical, mental and social health measures.

Hypothesis 3. Degree of improvement in experimental pain responses related to opioid taper will be predicted by demographic, pain, and opioid use history characteristics of the subject.

Data showing that pain perception improves as opioids are withdrawn would provide an evidence-based, mechanistic rationale for opioid taper in patients with chronic pain and have the potential to support a sea-change in opioid prescription practices. In that ongoing opioid therapy brings with it significant health risks for the patient and the community, it is critical that empirical evidence of its efficacy be demonstrated to balance the benefits with the risks of adverse events, potential misuse and abuse, and patient safety.

Enrollment

7 patients

Sex

All

Ages

21 to 70 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. between ages of 21-70;
  2. documented chronic neuropathic non-malignant pain condition of at least one year duration;
  3. on >100mg/day MED for at least 6 months;
  4. have fully engaged in all prescribed non-opioid pain management treatments;
  5. willing to undergo prescribed opioid taper;
  6. otherwise in good physical and mental health, or in the care of a physician who is willing to take responsibility for such treatment;
  7. able to understand the purpose and instructions of the study, and provide informed consent as approved by the University of Pennsylvania IRB.

Exclusion criteria

  1. meet diagnostic criteria for an active substance use disorder other than nicotine;
  2. be acutely psychotic, severely depressed, and/or in need of inpatient psychiatric treatment,
  3. have a neurological or psychiatric illness that would affect pain responses, including anxiety disorders;
  4. have a history of heart disease, stroke, or a pacemaker or uncontrolled high blood pressure. Good cardiovascular health is stipulated to ensure subjects can tolerate the sympathetic nervous system responses associated with the pain induction procedures.

Trial design

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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