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The Role of Disc Nutrition in the Etiology and Clinical Treatment of Disc Degeneration

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VA Office of Research and Development

Status

Begins enrollment this month

Conditions

Back Pain
Intervertebral Disc Degeneration

Treatments

Procedure: Physical Therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT04134910
B3118-W

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this research study is to examine the effects of physical therapy on the spinal discs. Back pain is the number one cause of disability in the US, and the spine is the most common location of chronic pain in Veterans. Physical therapy is often very effective at improving patients' back pain, but it does not work for everyone, and it is not understood how physical therapy alters the tissues within the spine. With this research the investigators hope to learn if the investigative team can measure changes to the spinal discs on MRI scans that might predict if a patient's back pain will improve with physical therapy or not.

Full description

Low back pain, which is frequently associated with intervertebral disc degeneration, is the most common cause of adult disability in the United States. Among active service members, the incidence of disc degeneration more than doubled from 2001 to 2010, with over 68,000 days of lost duty time attributed to disc degeneration.2 The most common location of chronic pain in Veterans is the spine. The incidence of back pain in the general public has remained relatively stable over the past decade, however, there has been more than a 50% increase in the number of Veterans diagnosed with back pain. The intervertebral discs are the largest avascular structures in the body, and therefore cells within the disc rely on transport from the small vessels in the adjacent vertebral endplate to receive nutrients and expel waste products. Despite the immense social and economic burden of back pain, the etiology of disc degeneration remains poorly understood. Because of the avascular nature of the disc, it has been speculated that poor disc nutrition characterized by reduced trans-endplate transport into the disc could contribute to the initiation and progression of degeneration. If a reduction in trans-endplate transport of nutrients and waste products is a primary contributor to the initiation and progression of the degenerative cascade, then enhancing disc nutrition may have a therapeutic effect. Physical therapy and exercise can be very effective in managing back pain for certain patients, yet it is not fully understood why certain patients respond to physical therapy and others do not, and what effects such interventions have on disc nutrition and disc health. The goal of this study is to undertake a pilot study to determine the feasibility and preliminary outcomes of utilizing quantitative MRI in human patients to quantify changes in disc health and trans-endplate transport over the course of physical therapy.

To do so, patients with low back pain and concomitant disc degeneration, who have not had prior spinal surgery, will be recruited. Recruited patients will undergo MRI T2-mapping and post-contrast enhanced T1-mapping of their lumbar spines at 1.5T to measure disc health and nutrition, respectively. Patients will then begin a 6 week physical therapy treatment regimen, after which the same MRI scans will be performed again on each patient. Pain and disability level of patients will be assessed via the visual analog scale (VAS) and Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) questionnaires, both pre- and post-treatment. Lumbar active range of motion will also be quantified at the initial and final in-office physical therapy session. Inclinometers will be placed at the thoracolumbar junction and sacrum, and the patient asked to bend forward and backward. Lumbar flexion will be quantified as the difference in motion between the two inclinometers.

Significant differences T1 and T2 values in the disc, as well as VAS and ODI scores and lumbar range of motion, before and after physical therapy will be assessed via a paired t-test, with significance defined as p<0.05. Univariate linear correlations between the changes in T1 or T2 values and changes in VAS, ODI scores and lumbar range of motion will be performed to determine if altered disc health or nutrition with physical therapy is significantly correlated with improvements in pain and disability.

Enrollment

15 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

30 to 70 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Current activity limiting low back pain
  • With symptoms of any duration
  • With or without symptoms extending distal to the buttocks
  • Medically stable
  • Candidate for physical therapy

Exclusion criteria

  • Documented history of prior spinal surgery

  • Contraindications to MRI including:

    • claustrophobia

    • pregnancy

    • implanted electronic devices

      • pacemakers, cochlear implant, insulin pumps, etc
    • metallic foreign bodies

      • i.e. shrapnel
    • documented history of contraindications to gadodiamide (Omniscan) administration:

      • chronic severe kidney disease
      • acute kidney injury
      • impaired elimination of gadolinium based contrast agents
      • pre-existing renal insufficiency
      • a prior hypersensitivity reaction to MRI contrast

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

15 participants in 1 patient group

Physical therapy
Experimental group
Description:
Subjects will be prescribed a 6-week physical therapy regimen consisting of one 45 minute in office visit per week, and home exercises performed daily. The in-office visits with a physical therapy provider will consist of the application of manual therapy, particularly high-velocity, low amplitude thrust mobilization in the anterior/posterior direction of the lumbar spine. In office visits will also include supervised repeated motion of the lumbar spine into extension (McKenzie therapy, 3 sets of 10 repetitions, in prone and standing positions) Patients will be instructed to complete these repeated extension exercises at home daily for the 6 week period.
Treatment:
Procedure: Physical Therapy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Sarah E Gullbrand, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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