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Women with early-stage breast cancer (BrCA) are surviving longer, but many experience symptoms after curative treatments. Approximately 50% of BrCA survivors experience persistent pain post-surgery. Identifying individuals at high risk for long-term symptoms is important for restoring function and enhancing quality of life. This pilot study will investigate psychological (depression, anxiety, catastrophizing) and biological (inflammatory markers, gut microbiome, pain sensitivity) correlates of persistent post-surgical pain in women participants with early-stage BrCA. The investigators will also investigate the type of surgery that participants had and whether it is related to persistent pain. The investigators plan explore these factors over time.
Full description
Subjects participate in a brief telephone or in-person screening to determine eligibility for this study. The first in-person visit to the UF Pain Clinical Research Unit (CRC) is scheduled to coincide with a pre-operative testing or a clinic visit. During this first visit, more health information is collected related to the eligibility criteria for the study and if the visit should proceed. The in-person screening process takes about 30 minutes. The Informed Consent will be reviewed to make sure that the subjects understand everything that is involved with the study. After consent, participants are randomly assigned, like the flip of a coin, a participant ID number known only to the investigators. The participants may choose not to continue or be excluded from the study after providing the screening information. The demographic and health information provided will be shredded. These names will be kept in a locked file, however, so that the investigators don't contact them again for screening. It will be indicated, next to the name and ID number, the reason for exclusion from the study. A copy of the signed informed consent form will remain in a locked file as well for documentation purposes.
If selected for this study and agree to participate, participants will be asked to complete several tests. These tests will take around 2 hours, and will be done following the screening questions during the first visit. The first visit will take about 2 ½ hours. There will be a second and third visit (approximately 3 and 6 months later) to the UF Pain CRC for follow-up testing. Each visit will last about 2 hours. Every effort will be made to combine these visits with regular post-surgery follow-up visits to the clinic or your health care provider. Each participant's hospital medical record associated with their surgery for breast cancer will be assessed for the amount of pain they experienced following their surgery and the pain medications that they received. Information related to the type of surgery (i.e., lumpectomy, mastectomy, or reconstruction), the results of the biopsies and lymph node tests, the characteristics of the breast tumor, and information about your surgery (e.g., type of anesthesia, duration of surgery, surgical complications) will be collected.
The following will occur during all 3 visits to the center. Information about health and medications will be collected. At the 2nd and 3rd visits, any changes to health and medications since the last visit will be collected. Blood pressure, heart rate, height and weight information will be collected from all participants. Surveys about participant's thoughts and feelings about pain will be conducted.
A trained professional will draw blood (about 1-2 teaspoons) from a vein your arm. This will be used to measure laboratory values associated with inflammation in the body. Specifically, the investigators will look for biomarkers, such as chemicals and hormones that might be related to pain. They will also check the level of vitamin D in your blood. No fasting is required before these blood tests. The stored blood sample will not be labeled with the participant's name. It will be labeled only with the ID number. The samples will be stored in the University of Florida Clinical and Translational Science Biorepository.
The Investigators will instruct participants in how to use a stool specimen kit. It will be used at home and returned in the mail. A stamped envelope will be provided to the participants with each kit. This will be used to measure microbes in your gut that are associated with inflammation. The stored stool sample will not be labeled with the participant's name. It will be labeled only with the ID number. The samples will be stored in a researcher's laboratory at the University of Florida. If participants are pre-menopausal woman, a urine pregnancy test may be required.
Several tests to measure sensitivity and tolerance to pain will be performed.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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