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Web-based cognitive-behavioral intervention for pain in pediatric acute recurrent and chronic pancreatitis: Protocol of a multicenter randomized controlled trial from the study of chronic pancreatitis, diabetes and pancreatic cancer (CPDPC)
- Palermo, Tonya M;
- Murray, Caitlin;
- Aalfs, Homer;
- Abu-El-Haija, Maisam;
- Barth, Bradley;
- Bellin, Melena D;
- Ellery, Kate;
- Fishman, Douglas S;
- Gariepy, Cheryl E;
- Giefer, Matthew J;
- Goday, Praveen;
- Gonska, Tanja;
- Heyman, Melvin B;
- Husain, Sohail Z;
- Lin, Tom K;
- Liu, Quin Y;
- Mascarenhas, Maria R;
- Maqbool, Asim;
- McFerron, Brian;
- Morinville, Veronique D;
- Nathan, Jaimie D;
- Ooi, Chee Y;
- Perito, Emily R;
- Pohl, John F;
- Schwarzenberg, Sarah Jane;
- Sellers, Zachary M;
- Serrano, Jose;
- Shah, Uzma;
- Troendle, David;
- Zheng, Yuhua;
- Yuan, Ying;
- Lowe, Mark;
- Uc, Aliye;
- Pancreatitis, Diabetes and Pancreatic Cancer on behalf of the Consortium for the Study of Chronic
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cct.2019.105898Abstract
Introduction
Abdominal pain is common and is associated with high disease burden and health care costs in pediatric acute recurrent and chronic pancreatitis (ARP/CP). Despite the strong central component of pain in ARP/CP and the efficacy of psychological therapies for other centralized pain syndromes, no studies have evaluated psychological pain interventions in children with ARP/CP. The current trial seeks to 1) evaluate the efficacy of a psychological pain intervention for pediatric ARP/CP, and 2) examine baseline patient-specific genetic, clinical, and psychosocial characteristics that may predict or moderate treatment response.Methods
This single-blinded randomized placebo-controlled multicenter trial aims to enroll 260 youth (ages 10-18) with ARP/CP and their parents from twenty-one INSPPIRE (INternational Study Group of Pediatric Pancreatitis: In search for a cuRE) centers. Participants will be randomly assigned to either a web-based cognitive behavioral pain management intervention (Web-based Management of Adolescent Pain Chronic Pancreatitis; WebMAP; N = 130) or to a web-based pain education program (WebED; N = 130). Assessments will be completed at baseline (T1), immediately after completion of the intervention (T2) and at 6 months post-intervention (T3). The primary study outcome is abdominal pain severity. Secondary outcomes include pain-related disability, pain interference, health-related quality of life, emotional distress, impact of pain, opioid use, and healthcare utilization.Conclusions
This is the first clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy of a psychological pain intervention for children with CP for reduction of abdominal pain and improvement of health-related quality of life. Findings will inform delivery of web-based pain management and potentially identify patient-specific biological and psychosocial factors associated with favorable response to therapy. Clinical Trial Registration #: NCT03707431.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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