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RecruitingNCT07137715

Psychological Options for Wellness and Recovery (POWeR) Trial for Veterans With Chronic Back/Neck Pain

Pain Reprocessing Therapy for Veterans With Chronic Back Pain: Comparative Efficacy and Facilitators and Barriers to Implementation

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
360 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Colorado, Denver · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn which treatment works better for veterans with chronic neck or back pain. This study is comparing three treatments: Pain Reprocessing Therapy (PRT), Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), and usual care (whatever a person is already doing to cope with their pain). The main questions the study aims to answer are: 1. Which treatment works better for lowering pain: PRT, CBT, or usual care? 2. How do the effects of PRT compare with CBT and usual care in terms of pain relief and other factors such as emotional functioning, quality of life, anxiety, and pain medication use? Participants will: 1. Be randomly assigned to receive either PRT, CBT, or usual care. 2. Complete questionnaires about their pain and health. 3. If in the PRT or CBT group, have nine weekly therapy sessions over video calls with a therapist.

Detailed description

The current leading psychotherapeutic treatment for chronic pain is cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT-CP), which has been found to be safe and modestly efficacious in the treatment of chronic back or neck pain (CBNP). The fundamental goal of CBT-CP is to encourage participants to adopt an active, problem-solving approach to managing the challenges associated with chronic pain. CBT-CP intervention follows a standard structure of 9 sessions with the following objectives: 1) reducing the negative impact of pain on daily life 2) improving physical and emotional functioning 3) increasing effective coping skills for managing pain 4) reducing pain intensity. Recent evidence shows CBT provides a 1-1.5 point reduction in pain intensity on an 11-point pain scale when compared to treatment as usual. Using advances in neuroscience and psychology, investigators recently developed a novel psychological treatment called Pain Reprocessing Therapy (PRT). Using a combination of cognitive, exposure-based, and somatic psychotherapy techniques, PRT aims to promote patients' reconceptualization of pain as due to reversible, non-dangerous brain activity rather than peripheral pathology. Critically, PRT aims to reduce or eliminate pain, rather than merely increase functioning. In the first trial of PRT (N = 151), 66% of patients randomized to PRT were pain-free or nearly pain-free at post-treatment, compared to fewer than 20% of those in the placebo and usual care control groups. PRT has several critical conceptual distinctions from CBT including different approaches to pain subtyping, a different understanding of chronic pain etiology, differing treatment goals (recovery vs. improved functioning), and a different focus on non-pain psychosocial threats. Given the conceptual differences and early existing promising efficacy data of PRT, a critical next step to achieve practical improvements in Veteran health is a comparative effectiveness trial of PRT vs. CBT in a Veteran Affairs (VA) clinic, utilizing VA clinicians, VA treatment infrastructure, and Veteran participants. Aim 1 of this study is to test the comparative effectiveness of PRT to CBT and usual care on pain severity (primary outcome) for veterans with CBNP at post-treatment (primary endpoint) and one year follow-up. Aim 2 of this study is to test the comparative effectiveness of PRT to CBT and usual care on secondary patient-reported outcomes measuring core outcome domains, quality of life, and opioid medication use. Aim 3 of this study is to identify key barriers and facilitators of PRT response in a Veteran population using qualitative methods in a subsample of participants (n = 40) and in clinicians learning PRT.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALPain reprocessing therapy (PRT)A promising new psychotherapy for chronic pain
BEHAVIORALCognitive Behavioral Therapy for Chronic Pain (CBT-CP)A psychotherapy for chronic pain that has 30+ years of research support.
OTHERUsual CareParticipants will be asked to continue to do whatever they are currently doing to manage their pain.

Timeline

Start date
2026-03-27
Primary completion
2028-01-01
Completion
2028-09-01
First posted
2025-08-22
Last updated
2026-03-31

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07137715. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.