| Literature DB >> 30820341 |
Ana-Maria Vranceanu1,2, Cale Jacobs3, Ann Lin1, Jonathan Greenberg1,2, Christopher J Funes1, Mitchel B Harris2,4, Marilyn M Heng2,4, Eric A Macklin2,5, David Ring6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Orthopedic injuries are the leading cause of hospital admissions in the USA, and many of these patients transition into chronic pain. Currently, there are no evidence-based interventions targeting prevention of chronic pain in patients with orthopedic injuries. We iteratively developed a four-session intervention "The Toolkit for Optimal Recovery" (TOR) which we plan to subsequently test for efficacy in a phase III hybrid efficacy-effectiveness multi-site clinical trial. In order to prevent methodological weaknesses in the subsequent trial, we conducted a feasibility pilot to evaluate the TOR delivered via secure live video versus usual care (UC) in patients with orthopedic injuries from an urban, level I trauma clinic, who screen in as at risk for chronic pain and disability. We tested the feasibility of recruitment, acceptability of screening, and randomization methods; acceptability of the intervention, treatment adherence, and treatment fidelity; satisfaction with the intervention; feasibility of the assessment process at all time points; acceptability of outcome measures for the definitive trial; and within-treatment effect sizes.Entities:
Keywords: Intervention; Orthopedic musculoskeletal injury; Physical function; Prevention of chronic pain; Telehealth; Video
Year: 2019 PMID: 30820341 PMCID: PMC6381627 DOI: 10.1186/s40814-019-0416-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pilot Feasibility Stud ISSN: 2055-5784
Session content for the “Toolkit for Optimal Recovery” (TOR)
| Session | Toolkit material |
|---|---|
| 1 | Discuss treatment rationale and goals |
| Learn how the sympathetic nervous system influences symptoms; learn about the disability spiral and how it can lead to slower recovery and chronic pain after orthopedic injury. Learn physical, emotional, and cognitive factors that can speed or slow recovery after orthopedic injury | |
| Provide education about the parasympathetic nervous system and relaxation; demonstrate relaxation strategies (diaphragmatic breathing, body scan) | |
| Set goals for skills practice: practice relaxation strategies daily | |
| 2 | Practice diaphragmatic breathing |
| Review previous material and homework; problem-solve barriers to practice | |
| Provide education about the biopsychosocial model and mind-body links | |
| Conduct mindfulness exercise on pain sensations. Assist patients in identifying what thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are triggered by the pain sensations and normalize this experience. Provide education about mindfulness techniques for observing thoughts-feelings-behaviors non-judgmentally. | |
| Learn decision tree for unhelpful thoughts: adaptive thinking for thoughts that are not true (e.g., “Pain means that I am getting worse”); acceptance, validation/compassion, and letting go for thoughts previously reframed who keep coming back, or for thoughts that are true but not helpful (It is harder to walk right now). | |
| Set goals for skills practice: practice diaphragmatic breathing, body scan or mindfulness on pain daily, complete at least one decision tree exercise, complete at least three reframing exercises | |
| 3 | Practice diaphragmatic breathing |
| Review previous material and homework; problem-solve barriers to practice | |
| Learn problem solving skills; assist patients in identifying a problem related to injury and applying problem solving skills | |
| Learn acceptance strategies; assist patients in identifying when to use reframing vs. problem solving vs. acceptance | |
| Provide rational for activity pacing; assist patients in setting activity goals consistent with their values; assist patients in applying acceptance, reframing or problem-solving skills to achieve activity pacing goals | |
| Set goals for skills practice: practice diaphragmatic breathing, body scan or mindfulness daily, complete at least one decision tree exercise, including options for problem solving, acceptance, and reframing; follow activity pacing protocol | |
| 4 | Practice diaphragmatic breathing |
| Review previous material and homework; problem-solve barriers to practice | |
| Review all skills; assist patients in identifying which skills are being used, how helpful they are, and how they can be implemented in the future | |
| Interactive quiz to identify improvements patients have made, skills that are being used, skills the patients would like to continue to work on and a plan for continued coping |
Fig. 1CONSORT flow diagram
Baseline patient characteristics
| Intervention (TOR) ( | Control (UC) ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | SD | Mean | SD | |
| Age | 51 | 16 | 50 | 21 |
|
| % |
| % | |
| Gender—women | 12 | 48 | 20 | 69 |
| Marital status | ||||
| Single | 7 | 28 | 9 | 31 |
| Married/civil union | 12 | 48 | 17 | 58.6 |
| Divorced/separates | 3 | 12 | 2 | 6.9 |
| Widowed | 1 | 4 | 1 | 3.4 |
| Other | 2 | 8 | 0 | 0 |
| Work status | ||||
| Unemployed | 3 | 12 | 5 | 17.2 |
| Retired | 6 | 24 | 6 | 29.6 |
| Homemaker | 1 | 4 | 1 | 3.4 |
| Employed full-time | 13 | 52 | 13 | 44.8 |
| Employed part-time | 1 | 4 | 2 | 6.8 |
| Other | 1 | 4 | 2 | 6.8 |
| Work-related injury—no | 25 | 100 | 27 | 93.1 |
| Prior orthopedic injury—yes | 12 | 48 | 15 | 48.3 |
| Pain medications—no | 15 | 60 | 18 | 62.1 |
| Anxiety/depression meds—no | 18 | 72 | 18 | 62.1 |
| Psychotherapy—no | 23 | 92 | 23 | 79.3 |
| PTSD diagnoses lifetime—no | 17 | 68 | 16 | 55.2 |
| Ethnicity—not Hispanic | 25 | 100 | 28 | 96.6 |
| Race | ||||
| White | 21 | 84 | 27 | 93.1 |
| Black | 2 | 8 | 1 | 3.4 |
| Asian | 2 | 8 | 1 | 3.4 |
Unadjusted means, standard deviations, and ranges for the outcome variables
| Outcome | Baseline | Post-intervention | 3-months follow-up |
|---|---|---|---|
| Physical function (SMFA) | |||
| TOR | 69.8 (18.2) (71.4) | 20.7 (17.4) (41.2) | 11.5 (19.3) (43.2) |
| UC | 63.2 (17.4) (69.22) | 48.6 (21.8) (65.2) | 37.6 (30.4.0) (85) |
| Pain intensity at rest (NRS) | |||
| TOR | 4.4 (2.8) (9) | 1.2 (1.1) (4) | 0.6 (2.2) (10) |
| UC | 1.9 (2.0) (8) | 2.0 (1.9) (6) | 2.1 (2.3) (9) |
| Pain intensity with activity (NRS) | |||
| TOR | 6.8 (2.5) (10) | 2.9 (2.3) (8) | 1.7 (2.2) (9) |
| UC | 5.6 (2.6) (7) | 5.1 (2.8) (9) | 4.8 (3.2) (10) |
| Depression (CES-D) | |||
| TOR | 20.0 (12.1) (43) | 8.0 (6.7) (28) | 6.6 (4.8) (18) |
| UC | 18.3 (10.9) (39) | 16.7 (11.1) (40) | 17.7 (12.7) (46) |
| PTSD (PCL-C) | |||
| TOR | 20.4 (15.2) (52) | 9.2 (11.5) (33) | 2.3 (4.3) (17) |
| UC | 18.8 (13.2) (58) | 17.0 (12.0) (37) | 18.6 (18.7) (65) |
| Pain catastrophizing (PCS) | |||
| TOR | 19.7 (9.0) (35) | 4.0 (5.4) (19) | 4.8 (9.1) (34) |
| UC | 17.6 (10.0) | 15.1 (9.4) (24) | 18.6 (13.9) (30) |
| Pain anxiety (PASS-20) | |||
| TOR | 41.4 (17.2) (77) | 11.2 (11.7) (43) | 10.1 (16.5) (57) |
| UC | 41.8 (16.0) (72)) | 34.2 (19.5) (64) | 39.7 (24.4) (82) |
| Satisfaction with recovery (0–10) | 7.9 (2.2) | ||
| Satisfaction with treatment (1–5) | 4.6 (0.7) | ||
| Satisfaction with clinician (1–5) | 4.9 (0.2) | ||