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PFI for Pain-Related Anxiety Among Hazardous Drinkers With Chronic Pain

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University of Houston

Status

Completed

Conditions

Chronic Pain
Alcohol Abuse
Alcohol Problem

Treatments

Behavioral: Personalized Feedback Intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT05036499
F31AA028694 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

There is a pressing public health need to develop novel interventions that aim to reduce alcohol consumption and concurrent alcohol among hazardous drinkers with comorbid chronic pain. The proposed study will draw upon NIH treatment development guidelines (Stage 1) to translate and innovate past work to address a major public health priority. Specifically, we propose to develop (Phase IA) and pilot test (Phase IB) a brief, integrated, single-session, computer-based personalized feedback intervention (PFI) designed to 1) enhance knowledge regarding adverse pain-related anxiety-alcohol interrelations; and (2) increase motivation and intention to reduce hazardous drinking.

Full description

Hazardous alcohol use contributes to mental and physical health problems, disability, and may lead to increased risk of premature death. Among individuals with chronic pain the rate of hazardous alcohol use is elevated compared to the general population, yet, hazardous alcohol users with chronic pain remain an underserved group. There is a critical need to test alternative and complimentary approaches to the implementation of effective interventions to reduce hazardous alcohol use among this high-risk segment of the general population; doing so in an integrated fashion (i.e., jointly targeting alcohol and affective mechanisms that may maintain pain-alcohol associations) may provide a more efficient and targeted intervention approach. Targeting pain-related anxiety, a transdiagnostic vulnerability factor that is prospectively associated with both hazardous drinking and chronic pain, may be beneficial. Thus, more work is needed to evaluate the benefit of targeting elevated pain-related anxiety among hazardous drinkers with chronic pain. Our approach will follow a staged model consistent with NIH guidelines for developing and standardizing behavioral interventions. Phase IB activities will include a proof-of-concept and highly rigorous randomized clinical trial designed to compare pain-related anxiety/alcohol PFI (PA-PFI) to assessment only among a sample of 130 hazardous drinkers with chronic pain who have elevated levels of pain-related anxiety. This study represents an important and pivotal step in the larger landscape of translating basic research to more efficacious strategies for reducing hazardous drinking among underserved populations with medical comorbidities. The proposed intervention would be highly disseminable and relevant to millions of hazardous drinkers with chronic pain. Given the collective public health impact of chronic pain and hazardous drinking, the proposed study will yield findings that enhance scientific knowledge, enhance our understanding of mechanisms in reciprocal pain-alcohol relations, and inform the development of novel treatments for hazardous drinkers with chronic pain with elevated pain-related anxiety that are adaptable and easily implemented across a variety of healthcare settings.

Enrollment

117 patients

Sex

All

Ages

21+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • ≥ 21 years of age
  • Current hazardous drinking pattern (AUDIT scores ≥ 8 for males and ≥ 7 for females)
  • Current chronic pain (1) on most days of the week (i.e., 4 or more days per week), (2) at an average weekly severity of 3 or greater on a 0-10 numerical rating scale, and (3) for at least three months in duration
  • Fluent in English

Exclusion criteria

  1. Concurrent alcohol or other substance use treatment
  2. Not being fluent in English
  3. Current acute psychiatric distress or thought disorder
  4. Current imminent risk of suicidality

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

117 participants in 2 patient groups

Personalized Feedback Intervention (PFI)
Experimental group
Description:
Personalized Feedback Intervention targeting pain-related anxiety for hazardous drinkers with chronic pain
Treatment:
Behavioral: Personalized Feedback Intervention
Assessment Only
No Intervention group
Description:
Assessment only, no active treatment elements

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Andrew H Rogers, M.A.; Michael J Zvolensky, Ph.D.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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