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Strategies to Improve Pain and Enjoy Life (STRIPE)

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University of Washington

Status

Completed

Conditions

Chronic Pain

Treatments

Behavioral: voluntary self-paced opioid taper
Other: usual care
Behavioral: prescribing guidance for primary care provider
Behavioral: Pain self-management training
Behavioral: video education, motivational interviewing

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT03743402
R01DA044970-01 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
SITE00000193

Details and patient eligibility

About

In the Strategies to Improve Pain and Enjoy Life (STRIPE) study, the effectiveness of a multicomponent intervention will be tested, compared with usual care, on opioid dose and pain outcomes among patients on high dose (≥ 40 mg morphine equivalent dose) long-term opioid therapy in a randomized controlled trial. This intervention will have 4 components: a) telephone-delivered evidence-based pain self-management training, b) web-based video of successfully tapered patients with motivational interviewing debriefing, c) a voluntary, self-paced opioid taper, and d) opioid and non-opioid prescribing guidance for the patient's primary care provider.

Full description

In a National Institute on Drug Abuse-funded R34 pilot study of pain self-management training for prescription opioid taper support, it was demonstrated that 22 weeks of opioid taper support promotes opioid dose reduction more effectively than usual care (43% vs 19% dose reduction from baseline) with no increase in pain intensity and significantly reduced activity interference. This intervention will now be adapted and tested in a large integrated primary care system. To address patients' fears of opioid taper that limited recruitment into this pilot study, subjects will be randomized to pain self-management training and then offered the option of self-paced opioid taper. Specifically, the effectiveness of this intervention will be tested, compared with usual care, on opioid dose and pain outcomes among patients on moderate-high dose (≥ 40mg morphine equivalent dose) long-term opioid therapy (LtOT) in a randomized controlled trial. This intervention will have 4 components: a) telephone-delivered evidence-based pain self-management training, b) web-based video of successfully tapered patients with motivational interviewing debriefing, c) a voluntary, self-paced opioid taper, and d) opioid and non-opioid prescribing guidance for the patient's primary care provider. Specific Aim 1: To adapt a previously developed prescription opioid taper support intervention into a telephone-delivered pain self-management training that provides the option for supported opioid taper. This will be delivered in multiple primary care clinics by a nurse interventionist trained and supervised by a pain psychologist and will include guidance in opioid and non-opioid medication prescribing. Specific Aim 2: To test in a randomized trial the effects of this intervention on: a) opioid outcomes: daily opioid dose (primary outcome), percent dose reduction from baseline, problem opioid use (questionnaire and electronic health record text indicators), and patient-reported opioid difficulties; and b) pain-related outcomes: PEG (self-report of Pain intensity, Enjoyment of life interference, General activity interference; primary outcome), pain self-efficacy, and anxiety and depression symptoms. Hypotheses pertaining to opioid use: Patients receiving LtOT for chronic non-cancer pain (CNCP) randomized to the STRIPE intervention, as compared with those randomized to usual care, will have lower opioid doses, greater percent reduction of opioid dose, lower proportions with problem opioid use, lower opioid craving, and lower levels of patient-reported opioid-related difficulties at 6 and 12 months after randomization. Hypotheses pertaining to pain outcomes: Patients receiving LtOT for CNCP randomized to the STRIPE intervention, as compared with those randomized to usual care, will have lower PEG scores, higher levels of pain self-efficacy, higher global impression of change, and lower levels of anxiety and depressive symptoms at 6 and 12 months after randomization. The proposed trial will determine whether pain self-management training can promote prescription opioid taper in moderate-higher-dose long-term opioid therapy patients without increasing pain level or activity and enjoyment interference. If this trial is successful, then prescribers and patients may be able to pursue supported opioid taper without fear of escalating pain.

Enrollment

153 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • age 18-80 years
  • receiving care at a Kaiser Washington primary care clinic;
  • Chronic Non-Cancer Pain, defined as patient-reported pain on more than half the days in the past 6 months;
  • currently on higher-dose long-term opioid therapy, defined as >90 days' supply in the past 180 days with a mean daily dose of 40 mg MED or greater in the past 90 days, as first identified via Kaiser's pharmacy dispensing data and subsequently validated by patient self-report during screening for the trial
  • consent to participate in the study arm to which they are randomly assigned
  • able to read, speak, and write English adequate for outcome measures
  • enrollment in Kaiser for at least 6 months prior and no plans to disenroll over the next year.

Exclusion criteria

  • receiving treatment for cancer
  • enrollment in palliative or hospice care
  • use in past year of parenteral, transdermal, or transmucosal opioids
  • residing in nursing home or assisted living
  • using any implanted device for pain control
  • psychotic symptoms, psychiatric hospitalization or suicide attempts in the past year
  • current suicidal ideation with plan or intent
  • dementia diagnosis in Electronic Health Record
  • Patients on buprenorphine for any reason, or methadone or naltrexone for treatment of Opioid Use Disorder

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

153 participants in 2 patient groups

Pain self-management
Experimental group
Description:
This intervention will have 4 components: 1. telephone-delivered evidence-based pain self-management training, 2. web-based video of successfully tapered patients with motivational interviewing debriefing, 3. a voluntary, self-paced opioid taper 4. opioid and non-opioid prescribing guidance for the patient's primary care provider.
Treatment:
Behavioral: video education, motivational interviewing
Behavioral: prescribing guidance for primary care provider
Behavioral: voluntary self-paced opioid taper
Behavioral: Pain self-management training
usual care
Active Comparator group
Description:
Patients randomized to usual care will continue to receive care as usual from their Kaiser primary care provider.
Treatment:
Other: usual care

Trial documents
2

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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