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RecruitingNCT05819476

Boosting Open-Label Placebo Effects in Acute Induced Pain in Healthy Adults

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
141 (estimated)
Sponsor
University Hospital, Basel, Switzerland · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This study is to investigate the effect of open-label placebo (OLP) application on acute pain in an experimental model of acute pain (simulating wound pain: this installation will apply monophasic, rectangular electrical pulses of 0.5ms duration with alternating polarity at 2 Hz frequency. The current will be increased to target a pain rating of 6 of 10 on the NRS (0 = no pain, 10 = worst imaginable pain). Three further adjustments in current will be made every 5 minutes for the next 15 minutes to compensate for habituation. This final current will be kept constant until the end of the particular experiment). In Part 1 duration of OLP analgesia will be examined, and onset and size of the effect will be reevaluated. In Part 2 of this study outcomes between subjects receiving one OLP injection, subjects receiving one repetition of the injection on a fixed time point and subjects receiving one repetition of the injection on-demand will be evaluated

Detailed description

Pain is highly prevalent in hospital settings. Standard systemic treatment for acute pain consists mainly of basic analgesia. The use of these drugs is often restricted due to their contraindications. Placebo is used nowadays to describe sham treatments and "inert" substances like sugar pills and saline injections. Placebos are proven to elicit clinically significant effects in various conditions, including pain. Ethical concerns about the use of deceptive placebos have prevented their implementation in clinical practice. A possibility to address this issue would be to prescribe placebos openly, that means, without deception. This randomized crossover study evaluates the efficacy of open-label placebo (OLP) in acute pain. Subjective pain ratings and areas of hyperalgesia and allodynia will be measured in a well-established experimental pain model (intradermal electrical stimulation model evoking pain: this installation will apply monophasic, rectangular electrical pulses of 0.5ms duration with alternating polarity at 2 Hz frequency. The current will be increased to target a pain rating of 6 of 10 on the NRS (0 = no pain, 10 = worst imaginable pain). Three further adjustments in current will be made every 5 minutes for the next 15 minutes to compensate for habituation. This final current will be kept constant until the end of the particular experiment) and analgesia elicited by OLP injections will be investigated. In Part 1 duration of OLP analgesia will be examined, and onset and size of the effect will be reevaluated. In Part 2 of this study outcomes between subjects receiving one OLP injection, subjects receiving one repetition of the injection on a fixed time point and subjects receiving one repetition of the injection on-demand will be evaluated (which leaves the last group a choice over when they would like to have the placebo "booster").

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDUREOLP-injectionOpen-label placebo injections without any active ingredient (5 ml 0.9% saline). All participants will be informed that the administered injections are placebo infusions.
OTHERScripted Evidence-based treatment rationaleAs a second component the intervention will consist of an evidence-based treatment rationale, which will be delivered to patients receiving the intervention prior to the OLP-injections, explaining placebo analgesia in pain in general and specifically in OLP. In the context of OLP treatments this rationale is important in order to create a mental state of positive expectations.
OTHERExperimental model of acute painExperimental model of acute pain (simulating wound pain: this installation will apply monophasic, rectangular electrical pulses of 0.5ms duration with alternating polarity at 2 Hz frequency. The current will be increased to target a pain rating of 6 of 10 on the NRS (0 = no pain, 10 = worst imaginable pain). Three further adjustments in current will be made every 5 minutes for the next 15 minutes to compensate for habituation. This final current will be kept constant until the end of the particular experiment).

Timeline

Start date
2023-03-23
Primary completion
2025-06-01
Completion
2025-06-01
First posted
2023-04-19
Last updated
2025-01-24

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Switzerland

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05819476. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.