| Literature DB >> 24906419 |
Daniel C Cherkin1, Karen J Sherman, Benjamin H Balderson, Judith A Turner, Andrea J Cook, Brenda Stoelb, Patricia M Herman, Richard A Deyo, Rene J Hawkes.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The self-reported health and functional status of persons with back pain in the United States have declined in recent years, despite greatly increased medical expenditures due to this problem. Although patient psychosocial factors such as pain-related beliefs, thoughts and coping behaviors have been demonstrated to affect how well patients respond to treatments for back pain, few patients receive treatments that address these factors. Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), which addresses psychosocial factors, has been found to be effective for back pain, but access to qualified therapists is limited. Another treatment option with potential for addressing psychosocial issues, mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR), is increasingly available. MBSR has been found to be helpful for various mental and physical conditions, but it has not been well-studied for application with chronic back pain patients. In this trial, we will seek to determine whether MBSR is an effective and cost-effective treatment option for persons with chronic back pain, compare its effectiveness and cost-effectiveness compared with CBT and explore the psychosocial variables that may mediate the effects of MBSR and CBT on patient outcomes. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24906419 PMCID: PMC4052284 DOI: 10.1186/1745-6215-15-211
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Figure 1Flowchart of the trial protocol. CBT, Cognitive-behavioral therapy; MBSR, Mindfulness-based stress reduction.
Inclusion criteria
| Primary sources | | A, TI |
| All GHC members with at least one primary care visit for back pain within the previous 3 to 15 months | Initial targeting of members with back pain visits in recent past is an efficient method of identifying persons with chronic back pain. | |
| Random sample of GHC members without visits for back pain within the previous 3 to 15 months | Emphasis placed on recruitment of GHC members to obtain complete treatment utilization and cost data from GHC medical records | |
| GHC members responding to an ad in the GHC magazine | ||
| Secondary sources | | A, TI |
| Random samples of nonmembers of GHC living in Washington state | Nonmembers of GHC included to ensure that recruitment goals are met. | |
| Age range 20 to 70 years | Chronic back pain in children is a result of causes different from those we will study. | |
| Adults have a higher risk of undiagnosed serious conditions that cause back pain. | ||
| Nonspecific, uncomplicated back pain as defined by ICD-9 codes (for primary source only: GHC members with primary care visits for back pain in the previous 3 to 15 months) | These codes are consistent with low back pain that is nonspecific and uncomplicated. | A |
| 724.2 Lumbago | | |
| 724.5 Backache, unspecified | | |
| 724.8 Other symptoms referable to back | | |
| 846.0-9 Sprains and strains, sacroiliac | | |
| 847.2 Sprains and strains, lumbar | | |
| 847.3 Sprains and strains, sacral | | |
| 847.9 Sprains and strains, unspecified site of the back |
GHC, Group Health Cooperative; ICD-9, International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision. A, Automated data gathered from visits; TI, Telephone interview.
Exclusion criteria
| Patient claims visit was not for low back pain | Study restricted to low back pain | TI |
| Low back pain has lasted <3 months | Low back pain not chronic | TI |
| Self-rated bothersomeness of pain rating of <4 (on 0 to 10 scale) and pain interference with activities rating <3 (on 0 to 10 scale) during previous week | Back pain too mild to detect improvement | TI |
| Abdominal aneurysm | Back pain due to or possibly result of specific disease or condition | A |
| Cancer in previous 5 years, other than basal cell or squamous cell cancer of the skin | | A, TI |
| Discitis | | A |
| Degenerative disc disease | | A |
| Fracture of vertebra | | A, TI |
| Infectious cause of back pain | | TI |
| Pregnancy | | TI |
| Scoliosis, severe or progressive | | A, TI |
| Spinal stenosis | | A, TI |
| Spondylolisthesis | | A, TI |
| Back surgery within previous 2 years | Back problem is complicated by medical or medicolegal issues | TI |
| Seeking or receiving compensation for back pain or involved in litigation related to back pain | ||
| Blindness | Condition might make it difficult to attend the classes or practice at home | A |
| Deafness | | A |
| No way to play home practice audio recordings at home | | TI |
| Paralysis | | A |
| Psychoses, major | | A, TI |
| Schedules do not permit participation in classes or home practice (including planning to move out of town) | | TI |
| Vision problems, severe | | TI |
| Hearing problems, severe | | TI |
| Lack of transportation | | TI |
| Fibromyalgia | Condition or circumstance might confound treatment effects or interpretation of data | TI |
| Rheumatoid arthritis and/or anklyosing spondylitis | | A, TI |
| Other disabling chronic conditions (for example, disabling heart or lung disease, diabetic neuropathy, receiving treatment for hepatitis) | | TI |
| Planning on seeing a specialist for back pain (for example, surgeon, neurologist, rheumatologist) | | TI |
| Dementia | Condition would make it difficult to provide fully informed consent | A |
| Unable to read or speak English | | TI |
| Currently taking a mind–body class for back pain or class taken within previous 1 year | Possible bias due to current or recent interventions | TI |
aA, Automated data gathered from visits; TI, Telephone interview.
Content of cognitive-behavioral therapy and mindfulness-based stress reduction class sessions
| 1 | Rationale and evidence base for CBT, pain neurobiology, overview of skills, rationale for relaxation training, diaphragmatic breathing instruction, introduction to behavioral goal setting (physical activity and home practice) | Setting expectations, defining mindfulness, engaging in mindfulness exercise and movement, abdominal breathing instructions, introducing home practice |
| 2 | Behavioral goal setting, physical activity and pacing activity, pleasant event scheduling, pain flare-up plan, diaphragmatic breathing and seven-muscle-group progressive muscle relaxation (PMR) instruction | Perception and responding creatively to perceptions, engaging in yoga, body scan, discussion of developing a practice |
| 3 | Role of thoughts and feelings in pain, introduction to the CBT model, thought-monitoring record, diaphragmatic and four-muscle-group PMR instruction, setting and working toward behavioral goals | Pleasure and power of being present, engaging in yoga, walking meditation, discussing how to bring more pleasant events into our lives |
| 4 | Challenging automatic thoughts related to pain, setting and working toward behavioral goals, diaphragmatic breathing and four-muscle-group/no-tension PMR instruction | Getting unstuck from old patterns, engaging in yoga and/or movement, sitting meditation, stress (define and identify how and why we stay stuck), dealing with pain |
| 5 | Challenging automatic thoughts and generating alternate thoughts, distraction techniques, brief body scan relaxation instruction, setting and working toward behavioral goals | Reacting and responding differently to stress, engaging in yoga, participating in guided meditation, establishing coping strategies (living with difficulties) |
| 6 | Alternate thoughts, thought stopping, behavioral activation, mini-relaxation instruction, setting and working toward behavioral goals | Learning about communication patterns, engaging in yoga and/or meditation, styles of communicating with others (effective and ineffective) |
| 7 | Rehearsing pain coping skills, identifying and challenging negative thoughts, setting and working toward behavioral goals, mini-relaxation instruction, sleep tips | Integrating learning from techniques, yoga and/or meditation, practical ways to bring mindfulness into daily life |
| 8 | Maintenance of coping skills, relapse prevention, personal plan for the future | This is the rest of your life, review mindfulness techniques and applications, closure |
aCBT, Cognitive-behavioral therapy; MBSR, Mindfulness-based stress reduction.
Baseline and follow-up measures
| Baseline characteristics | | | | | |
| Patient characteristics (age, sex, education, race, ethnicity, marital status, income, work status, number of pain sites) | x | | | | |
| Back pain (pain duration, interference with activities, days of pain in previous 6 months, previous spinal injections, whether pain radiates into leg below knee) | x | | | | |
| Expectations for back pain improvement in general and as result of MBSR or CBT | x | | | | |
| Primary outcomes | | | | | |
| Back pain-related activity limitations in past week (modified RDQ) | x | x | x | x | x |
| Bothersomeness of back pain in past week (0 to 10 scale) | x | x | x | x | x |
| Secondary outcomes | | | | | |
| Characteristic pain intensity (GCPS) (average of pain now, worst pain, average pain) | x | | x | x | x |
| Depression (PHQ-8) | x | | x | x | x |
| Anxiety (GAD-2) | x | | x | x | x |
| Medications used for back pain in past week | x | | x | x | x |
| Exercise in past week (back pain–specific and general) | x | | x | x | x |
| Global improvement (PGIC) | | | x | x | x |
| Program’s impact on thoughts, feelings, reactions, activities (open-ended) | | | x | x | x |
| Potential mediators | | | | | |
| MBSR: mindfulness (FFMQ-SF), pain acceptance (CPAQ-8) | x | x | x | x | x |
| CBT: pain beliefs and appraisals (PSEQ; SOPA 2-item control, disability and harm scales; PCS), pain coping strategies (CPCI activity pacing scale and 2-item relaxation scale) | x | x | x | x | x |
| Cost-effectiveness outcomes | | | | | |
| Quality of life (EQ-5D, SF-6D from the SF-12) | x | x | x | x | x |
| Out-of-plan visits paid for by patients since previous follow-up interview | x | | x | x | x |
| Absenteeism, presenteeism (WPAI-CLBP) | x | | x | x | x |
| Costs paid by GHC (payer) for back-related utilization of services (visits, tests, prescriptions) and total costs (GHC members only) (from GHC electronic medical records for year prior to trial and for follow-up year) | | ||||
| Intervention-related information | | | | | |
| Class attendance (class records) | | | | | |
| Adverse experiences from classes or home practice | | x | x | x | x |
| New serious health problems since entering study | | x | x | x | x |
| Self-reported home practice | | x | x | x | x |
| Perceived helpfulness of classes and home practice | | | x | x | x |
| Would recommend program to friends | x | x | x | ||
aCBT, Cognitive-behavioral therapy; CPAQ-8, 8-item Chronic Pain Acceptance Questionnaire; CPCI, Chronic Pain Coping Inventory; EQ-5D, European Quality of Life (EuroQol) instrument in 5 dimensions; FFMQ, Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire; GAD-2, 2-item Generalized Anxiety Disorder scale; GCPS, Graded Chronic Pain Scale; MBSR, Mindfulness-based stress reduction; PCS, Pain Catastrophizing Scale; PGIC, Patient Global Impression of Change scale; PHQ-8,8 item Patient Health Questionnaire; PSEQ, Patient Self-efficacy Questionnaire; RDQ, Roland Disability Questionnaire; SF-6D, Short Form Health Survey in 6 dimensions; SF-12, 12-item Short Form Health Survey; SOPA, Survey of Pain Attitudes; WPAI-CLBP, Work Productivity and Activity Impairment Questionnaire–Chronic Low Back Pain.