Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03707431

Internet Based Cognitive Behavioral Therapy in Pediatric Chronic Pancreatitis

A Randomized Trial of a Web-based Non-pharmacological Pain Intervention for Pediatric Chronic Pancreatitis

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
90 (actual)
Sponsor
Seattle Children's Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
10 Years – 19 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Abdominal pain is common in children with chronic and acute recurring pancreatitis (CP, ARP), and as they continue into adulthood, the disease progresses with increased pain and greater exposure to opioids. Despite the relevancy of early pain self-management for childhood pancreatitis, there have been no studies of non-pharmacological pain intervention in this population. The proposed project will evaluate a web-based cognitive behavioral pain management program delivered to a cohort of well-phenotyped children with CP/ARP and some community participants to reduce pain, pain-related disability and enhance HRQOL; it will also identify genetic risk factors and clinical and behavioral phenotypic factors associated with treatment response to enable precision medicine approaches.

Detailed description

Abdominal pain is present in 81% of children and adolescents with CP and ARP. Effective treatments that target pain in these children will lessen the risk of opioid exposure and continued pain and disability into adulthood. We plan to recruit a large multicenter sample of 260 children and adolescents (ages 10-19 years) with CP/ARP and their parents from INSPPIRE 2 (INSPPIRE:INternational Study Group of Pediatric Pancreatitis: In search for a cuRE) centers and pancreatitis community groups (e.g. NPF) to evaluate the efficacy of WebMAP, a web-based cognitive behavioral pain management program (CBT). The study design is a two (group) x three (time point) randomized, controlled, double-blinded trial. Participants will be randomly assigned to receive online access to either pain education (WebED) or CBT (WebMAP) over an 8-10 week treatment period. The primary study outcome is abdominal pain symptoms measured at pre-treatment, immediately post-treatment, and at 6-month follow-up. Secondary outcomes include pain-related disability, health-related quality of life, depression and anxiety symptoms, and medication use. This project represents a significant advance in pain management for children with CP/ARP by evaluating the first ever nonpharmacologic pain intervention in these patients, which may guide future developments in the management of chronic pain associated with CP/ARP.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALWeb-based CBTThe eight child modules include: 1) education about chronic pain, 2) recognizing stress and negative emotions, 3) deep breathing and relaxation, 4) implementing coping skills at school, 5) cognitive skills (e.g., reducing negative thoughts), 6) lifestyle interventions, 7) staying active (e.g., pleasant activity scheduling), 8) relapse prevention. The eight parent modules are: 1) education about chronic pain, 2) recognizing stress and negative emotions, 3) operant strategies I (using attention and praise to increase coping), 4) operant strategies II (using rewards to increase positive coping and reach school goals), 5) modeling, 6) lifestyle, 7) communication, 8) relapse prevention.
BEHAVIORALPain EducationThe pain education website provides publicly available educational information about pancreatitis and abdominal pain. There is general information about pancreatitis from available web sources (e.g., National Pancreas Foundation) as well as information about chronic pain in childhood. The content does not include any instruction in the behavioral and cognitive skills taught within the WebMAP program.

Timeline

Start date
2019-04-25
Primary completion
2024-07-31
Completion
2024-07-31
First posted
2018-10-16
Last updated
2026-04-09
Results posted
2026-04-09

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03707431. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.