Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Withdrawn

WithdrawnNCT03465826

Developing a Mobile Health Pain-Coping Skills Training Program for the Treatment of Chronic Migraine: AIM 4

Developing a Mobile Health Pain-Coping Skills Training Program for the Treatment of Chronic Migraine: Testing Feasibility, Acceptability, and Utility, AIM 4

Status
Withdrawn
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
0 (actual)
Sponsor
Wake Forest University Health Sciences · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This ClinicalTrials.gov record pertains only to the clinical trial described below in Aim 4. Aims 1-3 and 5 are described here as background information. This study will be a two-site collaborative research effort (Wake Forest \& Duke Univ.) drawing on expertise of investigators steeped in PCST, Internet-based treatment delivery, and development of cost-efficient and maximally-accessible behavioral interventions for migraine and chronic pain. This research will address four specific aims via a mixed-methods approach. In Aim 1 subjects (n=20) will be recruited to participate in user testing of the extant program (PainCOACH1). In Aim 2 subjects (n=64, including migraineurs, members of migraine patient advocacy groups, and clinical professionals trained in headache medicine) will participate in focus groups to provide guidance for appropriately tailoring the program for the treatment of chronic migraine. In Aim 3 feedback from Aims 1 and 2 will be employed to build and develop PainCOACH Migraine which will be beta-tested and refined. In Aim 4 subjects (n=144) will be recruited to participate in a randomized, controlled trial of the PainCOACH Migraine program (versus Medical Treatment as Usual) to demonstrate its feasibility, acceptability and engagement, and promise. Guided by findings from these aims a final exploratory aim will be conducted to optimize the program using prediction models to identify patients at risk for poor outcomes or attrition, and an adaptive therapeutic process targeting improved outcomes for such patients. Ultimately these research efforts will provide data and experience needed to support a subsequent large-scale and methodologically rigorous adaptive trial to test PainCOACH Migraine and enhance understanding of the potentials for Internet-based delivery of behavioral programs for individuals with chronic migraine.

Detailed description

In addition to experiencing chronic pain, disability, and diminished quality of life, individuals with chronic migraine face critical access barriers to traditional, validated, clinic-based behavioral headache treatments (eg, availability of trained therapists, cost, absences from work). Internet-based and mHealth technologies show promise for the treatment of chronic pain conditions and are primed to address barriers to treatment, but have not yet been optimally translated into interventions for chronic migraine. A program of development is proposed to transform a validated, 8-week Internet-based pain-coping skills training (PCST) program (PainCOACH I; original) into a version specific for chronic migraine. PainCOACH I was designed to retain key therapeutic components of in-clinic protocols and includes 8 modules of self-directed, tailored, interactive training in cognitive behavioral pain coping skills. A "virtual coach" provides verbal and visual instruction, feedback, and encouragement guided by theoretically-based learning principles. PainCOACH I has been successfully tested for populations with osteoarthritis and cancer pain, and has been studied in the US and Australia. This clinical trial registration pertains only to Aim 4 of the study. In Aim 4 subjects (n=144) will be recruited to participate in a randomized, controlled trial of the PainCOACH Migraine program (versus Medical Treatment as Usual) to demonstrate its feasibility, acceptability and engagement, and promise.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALPainCOACH Pain Coping Skills TrainingMigraineurs will participate in 4 weeks of daily headache monitoring, baseline questionnaires, followed by 8 weeks of the PainCOACH migraine mHealth Pain Coping Skills Training program (developed by Drs. Keefe and Rini based on social cognitive theory and in-person pain coping therapy sessions). Following the 8 week mHealth intervention, participants will immediately complete post-treatment assessments and later will complete follow-up assessments at 3 and 6 months.
BEHAVIORALTreatment as UsualParticipants will keep headache diaries for 4 weeks, followed by baseline assessments + 8 weeks of daily headache monitoring (as a parallel to the PainCOACH intervention). Post-assessments will immediately follow, and participants later will complete follow-up assessments at 3 and 6 months.

Timeline

Start date
2022-05-01
Primary completion
2026-04-30
Completion
2027-04-30
First posted
2018-03-14
Last updated
2021-03-15

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03465826. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.