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The PROmoting Pain Self-Management (PROs) Trial: Holistic Pain Care in the Military Health System

Brooke Army Medical Center logo

Brooke Army Medical Center

Status

Begins enrollment in 2 months

Conditions

Musculoskeletal Pain
Musculoskeletal Pain Disorder
Chronic Pain

Treatments

Behavioral: Move to Health
Other: Usual Care as determined by primary care provider
Behavioral: Empowered Relief

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency
NIH

Identifiers

NCT06940986
Pending

Details and patient eligibility

About

The goal of this study is to improve pain care in the MHS by identifying effective, whole-person, non-pharmacologic interventions for persons with chronic musculoskeletal pain. The investigators will evaluate two promising, evidence-based holistic health interventions and compare them to usual care.

Full description

Chronic pain is a ubiquitous problem and growing concern for the Military Health System (MHS). Chronic musculoskeletal (MSK) pain conditions are the most common chronic pain conditions in the MHS. Numerous recommendations have been made to improve care for chronic MSK pain in the MHS. First, the Office of the Army Surgeon General is promoting the transition of the MHS to a holistic health system that seeks to maintain, restore, and improve health through team-based care supporting self-management and recognizing the complex, biopsychosocial nature of chronic pain. Second, a stepped care approach to pain management is advocated to make less intense but effective, first-line care broadly available and to base subsequent care on response to first-line options. While the MHS has articulated its vision for holistic pain care delivered within a stepped care framework, there is a need for research addressing key questions of which interventions are most effective and how to operationalize the stepped care model. In addition, pragmatic, sustainable strategies to implement holistic pain care in the MHS are needed. Electronic health records (EHR) are increasingly used to implement evidence-based interventions, but have not been widely tested in the MHS. The MHS has deployed a new system-wide EHR with standards-based capabilities for decision-support, making EHR-based implementation a timely option with high potential for future scalability.

Design: Pragmatic, individually-randomized, type I hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial Methods: The investigators will use the EMR to help facilitate recruitment. The investigators plan to recruit a total of 608 persons with chronic MSK pain receiving care in the MHS. Participants providing consent will be randomized in 1 : 2.3 : 2.3 ratio to Usual Care (UC), Empowered Relief (ER), or Move to Health (M2H) for phase I treatment. All participants will be re-evaluated after 14 weeks. Participants initially assigned to the ER, determined to be non-responders to treatment, will receive M2H as a Phase II intervention to evaluate a stepped care process. All participants will also complete assessments at 26 and 52 weeks after randomization. The primary outcome will be a self-reported measure of pain impact. Secondary outcomes will include additional effectiveness measures. The research team will also evaluate implementation outcomes grounded in a Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance (RE-AIM) framework.

Summary: The goal of the promoting pain self-management (PROs) study is to improve pain care in the MHS by identifying effective, whole-person, non-pharmacologic interventions for persons with chronic MSK pain. The investigators plan to evaluate two promising, evidence-based interventions, ER and M2H, and also compare these to UC.

Enrollment

608 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age 18 or older
  • TRICARE Beneficiary
  • Meets the case definition of chronic MSK pain requiring 2 or more medical encounters within the past year and at least 90 days apart for the same MSK condition indicated by medical encounter data or MSK pain ICD-10 codes in the electronic medical record

Exclusion criteria

  • Actively receiving cancer treatment
  • Currently known to be pregnant
  • Receiving advanced chronic pain management, including multi-disciplinary or behavioral pain management or mental health or substance use programs (beyond the initial step of the VA/DoD stepped care model for pain management)
  • Suicidal Ideation determined by a higher than lower risk score on the P4 Screener
  • Currently undergoing post-surgical rehabilitation

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

608 participants in 3 patient groups

Empowered Relief
Active Comparator group
Description:
Empowered Relief uses a single, 2-hour session to accomplish several key tasks including; pain education; experiential exercises; didactic content on pain responses, stress, and tension; techniques to affect the relaxation response; basic unhelpful thought restructuring; self-soothing actions; and completion of a per-sonalized self-management plan for empowered relief. Similar to CBT relaxation, ER participants receive a calming tool in the form of a binaural app. Unlike CBT, ER is mainly didactic, omits content such as activity planning and pacing, and is provided in a single session, eliminating ongoing therapeutic alliance and peer support.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Empowered Relief
Move to Health
Active Comparator group
Description:
Move to Health (M2H) is part of an initiative in the Military Health System to transform healthcare delivery with emphasis on the power of holistic care and self-management. M2H is operationalized using a health coaching model based on collaborative part-nership between patient and a trained coach to facilitate healthy behavior change. Health coaching is an evidence-based intervention for persons with chronic pain with improvements in physical activity, pain intensity and interference.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Move to Health
Usual Care
Active Comparator group
Description:
Usual care (UC) pain management will be provided at the discretion of the participant's primary care provider, consistent with a pragmatic clinical trial. Persons assigned to UC will be advised to follow the recommendations from their primary care provider and will be provided information about local resources at their respective Military Treatment Facility. The study team will not take additional steps to standardize or compel adherence to practice guidelines and will collect health care utilization outcomes through the the Millitary Health System Data Repository at the conclusion of the trial.
Treatment:
Other: Usual Care as determined by primary care provider

Trial contacts and locations

5

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Central trial contact

Rachel Mayhew, DPT; Tina Greenlee, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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