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Pain Relief in Patients With Chronic Low Back Pain Using HeatTens vs. Standard Care.

V

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

Status

Completed

Conditions

Chronic Low Back Pain
Movement Evoked Pain

Treatments

Device: HeatTens (HV-F311-E)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT03643731
B.U.N. 143201836092

Details and patient eligibility

About

A two-armed randomized controlled clinical trial with blind assessments and a follow-up period of 4 weeks is developed. The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of the combination of heat and TENS (HeatTENS device) on pain in people with chronic low back pain. A sample of 70 patients will be recruited. Following baseline measurements, subjects will be randomly allocated to the experimental or the control group. The experimental group will be asked to use the device on a daily basis, 30 minutes per day. The control group will have no device. After 4 weeks of FU, measurements will be repeated.

Full description

Drop out:

If subjects drop out, due to any kind of reason, a new participant will be included in order to obtain the predetermined number of participants. Data collected from the participant that dropped out will be deleted and not taken into account in the further analysis.

Analysis of the samples:

Sample size is based on data from (Dailey et al. 2013). Researchers found a significant difference in the reduction of movement-evoked pain (pain during the 6 minutes' walk test (6MWT)) ((4.0 ± 2.5) on a 0-10 VAS) when compared to no TENS (5.0 ± 2.6) (p<0.05) in patients with primary fibromyalgia.

In this study the response within each subject group was normally distributed. If the true difference in the experimental and control means is 1.0, effect size is calculated to be 0,2 (by means of G*Power version 3.1.9.3). 29 experimental subjects and 29 control subjects need to be included to be able to reject the null hypothesis that the population means of the experimental and control groups are equal with probability (power) 0.8. The Type I error probability associated with this test of this null hypothesis is 0.05. To take into account a 15% loss of data sample size is inflated up to 33 per group (n/0.85). Sample size is augmented by 10% per potential confounding factor (i.e. age and sex). The total sample size to be recruited will be 70 subjects.

Statistical analysis:

The person to conduct the statistical analyses will be Lynn Leemans (Human Physiology and Anatomy (KIMA), Vrije Universiteit Brussel).

An intention-to-treat analysis will be performed so that the integrity of the randomization is ensured. Normality will be checked via the Shapiro-Wilk test.

To ensure good balance of participant characteristics in each group at baseline, stratification is used. Changes in differences between both treatment groups after the intervention period (at 4w) will be analyzed using repeated measures ANOVA for the following variables: sensitivity to movement-evoked pain, quality of life, pressure pain thresholds, temporal summation and conditioned pain modulation.

If the modulus of the partial correlation of potential confounding factors age and sex with the primary outcome values equals minimum 0.3, these covariates of prognostic values will be added as covariates in the ANOVA model.

As a secondary analysis, a linear regression analysis will be used with the following dependent factors: BMI, and as independent factors: sensitivity to movement-evoked pain, pressure pain thresholds, temporal summation, conditioned pain modulation, fear avoidance beliefs and quality of life.

Significance value for all tests will be set at p < 0.05. All analyses will be performed using SPSS 20 for Mac.

Quality control and quality assurance:

All electronic data will be stored on the shared drive of a university computer, which is encrypted; and on a password protected laptop belonging to the principal researcher (Lynn Leemans). Transfer of data will only be done if essential.

All anonymised data will be stored for up to four years to allow for access before publication, and may be required at a later date for further analysis and auditing. All personal data, including health questionnaires and signed consent forms, will be destroyed within 12 months of the study finishing.

Publication policy:

Both parties (VUB and Omron) acknowledge the importance of public disclosure of information collected of generated because of this clinical study. Omron retains the ability before publication to verify and ensure correct and accurate information is represented of the product and the brand used (product names, product types, brand name, product code) with no influence of the scientific results and conclusions of the integrity of the publication.

Enrollment

50 patients

Sex

All

Ages

25 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • chronic nonspecific LBP for at least 3 months' duration: non-specific LBP implies that patients are not allowed to have any evidence of specific spinal pathology (e.g., hernia, spinal stenosis, spondylolisthesis, infection, spinal fracture or malignancy).

Exclusion criteria

  • spinal surgery in the past 6 months
  • severe underlying comorbidity (like diagnosed diabetes, cardiovascular problems, etc.),
  • pregnant or given birth in the preceding year,
  • having initiated a new LBP treatment in the 6 weeks prior to study participation

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

50 participants in 2 patient groups

HeatTens
Experimental group
Description:
After baseline measurements and during 4 weeks of follow up Composition and dosing of the device: HeatTens (HV-F311-E) 2 - 108 Hz (modulation), 100 microsec (pulse duration) for 30 minutes.
Treatment:
Device: HeatTens (HV-F311-E)
Control group
No Intervention group
Description:
No intervention

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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