ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Web-based Cognitive-behavior Therapy (CBT) for Opioid-treated, Chronic Pain Patients With Aberrant Behavior (WebCBTPain)

N

National Development and Research Institutes, Inc.

Status

Completed

Conditions

Chronic Pain

Treatments

Behavioral: Web-based CBT for chronic pain

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT01498510
R01DA026887 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
WebCBTPain618

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to develop and evaluate an innovative, web-based self-management intervention for opioid-treated chronic pain patients who display aberrant drug-related behavior.

Full description

Within the past decade, there has been increasing recognition of the limitations and risks of opioid therapy for chronic pain, spurred by the U.S.' widespread epidemic of opioid misuse. Within the clinical context, concerns about long-term opioid therapy persist due to limited evidence of efficacy and the occurrence of medication misuse/abuse (termed aberrant drug-related behavior). Psychosocial approaches, particularly self-management strategies such as cognitive-behavior therapy (CBT), have been found to be efficacious for the treatment of chronic pain. However, most chronic pain patients are not exposed to comprehensive psychosocial interventions, due to factors including pain specialty physicians' lack of familiarity with and time to provide behavioral treatments and insufficient payer coverage for these therapies. To address these public health concerns, this study developed, implemented and evaluated an innovative, web-based CBT intervention for the treatment of chronic pain tailored to the specific needs of patients who are prescribed opioids and present with aberrant behavior. The development of this interactive, web-based intervention was informed by iterative feedback from pain experts and chronic pain patients. In a randomized, controlled trial, chronic pain patients receiving opioid therapy at a pain specialty practice were assigned to receive 12 weeks of either treatment-as-usual (TAU; n=55) or treatment-as-usual plus the web-based intervention (Web-CBT; n=55). The trial evaluated the relative effectiveness of these treatments on the primary outcomes of pain severity, pain interference and aberrant opioid-taking behavior, and the secondary outcomes of pain catastrophizing and pain-related Emergency Department visits. Additional analyses explored the impact of the intervention on several supplementary outcomes, such as various categories of activities, psychiatric distress and positive affect, and examined hypothesized mediators of treatment outcome, including quality of life, social support and expectations about the future.

Enrollment

110 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • moderate-to-severe pain for at least 3 months (score of 5 or greater on Brief Pain Inventory)
  • patient at pain treatment program study site
  • prescribed opioid analgesics
  • aberrant drug-related behavior within the past 30 days (endorsing 4 or more items on the Current Opioid Misuse Measure)

Exclusion criteria

  • primary headache or cancer pain
  • scheduled for major surgery within the next 6 months
  • described by physician as likely to die within the next year
  • plans to move out of the area within the next 3 months
  • insufficient ability to provide informed consent or insufficient English to participate in consent process, assessments or computer intervention

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

110 participants in 2 patient groups

treatment-as-usual (TAU)
No Intervention group
Description:
The standard medical treatment provided to chronic pain patients at the study site pain specialty practice
TAU plus web-based intervention
Experimental group
Description:
An interactive, web-based intervention, based on principles of cognitive behavior therapy (CBT), that teaches chronic pain patients with aberrant behavior self-management skills to reduce pain severity and medication misuse and improve functioning
Treatment:
Behavioral: Web-based CBT for chronic pain

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems