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ECAP-controlled closed-loop versus open-loop SCS for the treatment of chronic pain: 36-month results of the EVOKE blinded randomized clinical trial.
- Mekhail, Nagy;
- Levy, Robert;
- Deer, Timothy;
- Kapural, Leonardo;
- Li, Sean;
- Amirdelfan, Kasra;
- Pope, Jason;
- Hunter, Corey;
- Rosen, Steven;
- Costandi, Shrif;
- Falowski, Steven;
- Burgher, Abram;
- Gilmore, Christopher;
- Qureshi, Farooq;
- Staats, Peter;
- Scowcroft, James;
- McJunkin, Tory;
- Carlson, Jonathan;
- Kim, Christopher;
- Yang, Michael;
- Stauss, Thomas;
- Petersen, Erika;
- Hagedorn, Jonathan;
- Rauck, Richard;
- Kallewaard, Jan;
- Baranidharan, Ganesan;
- Taylor, Rod;
- Poree, Lawrence;
- Brounstein, Dan;
- Duarte, Rui;
- Gmel, Gerrit;
- Gorman, Robert;
- Gould, Ian;
- Hanson, Erin;
- Karantonis, Dean;
- Khurram, Abeer;
- Leitner, Angela;
- Mugan, Dave;
- Obradovic, Milan;
- Ouyang, Zhonghua;
- Parker, John;
- Single, Peter;
- Soliday, Nicole
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1136/rapm-2023-104751Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The evidence for spinal cord stimulation (SCS) has been criticized for the absence of blinded, parallel randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and limited evaluations of the long-term effects of SCS in RCTs. The aim of this study was to determine whether evoked compound action potential (ECAP)-controlled, closed-loop SCS (CL-SCS) is associated with better outcomes when compared with fixed-output, open-loop SCS (OL-SCS) 36 months following implant. METHODS: The EVOKE study was a multicenter, participant-blinded, investigator-blinded, and outcome assessor-blinded, randomized, controlled, parallel-arm clinical trial that compared ECAP-controlled CL-SCS with fixed-output OL-SCS. Participants with chronic, intractable back and leg pain refractory to conservative therapy were enrolled between January 2017 and February 2018, with follow-up through 36 months. The primary outcome was a reduction of at least 50% in overall back and leg pain. Holistic treatment response, a composite outcome including pain intensity, physical and emotional functioning, sleep, and health-related quality of life, and objective neural activation was also assessed. RESULTS: At 36 months, more CL-SCS than OL-SCS participants reported ≥50% reduction (CL-SCS=77.6%, OL-SCS=49.3%; difference: 28.4%, 95% CI 12.8% to 43.9%, p<0.001) and ≥80% reduction (CL-SCS=49.3%, OL-SCS=31.3%; difference: 17.9, 95% CI 1.6% to 34.2%, p=0.032) in overall back and leg pain intensity. Clinically meaningful improvements from baseline were observed at 36 months in both CL-SCS and OL-SCS groups in all other patient-reported outcomes with greater levels of improvement with CL-SCS. A greater proportion of patients with CL-SCS were holistic treatment responders at 36-month follow-up (44.8% vs 28.4%), with a greater cumulative responder score for CL-SCS patients. Greater neural activation and accuracy were observed with CL-SCS. There were no differences between CL-SCS and OL-SCS groups in adverse events. No explants due to loss of efficacy were observed in the CL-SCS group. CONCLUSION: This long-term evaluation with objective measurement of SCS therapy demonstrated that ECAP-controlled CL-SCS resulted in sustained, durable pain relief and superior holistic treatment response through 36 months. Greater neural activation and increased accuracy of therapy delivery were observed with ECAP-controlled CL-SCS than OL-SCS. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT02924129.
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