The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of a brief psychological intervention, cognitive-behavior therapy, for the management of persistent pain associated with diabetic peripheral neuropathic pain.
Research Design: A randomized controlled design will be employed in which CBT plus standard pharmaceutical care (CBT/SC) is compared to an educational intervention plus standard pharmaceutical care (ED/SC) treatment condition. A target sample size of approximately 215 participants will be recruited. Participants will be randomized in equal numbers to the two conditions. Methodology: Study participants will be evaluated pre-treatment (baseline), 12 weeks post-baseline (post-treatment) and at 36 weeks post-baseline (follow-up). Baseline assessment will include a physical examination to confirm the diagnosis of diabetic neuropathy. The primary outcome measure will be pain intensity. Secondary outcome measures will be pain quality, pain-related disability, and physical and emotional functioning. Measures of treatment feasibility will also be examined. CBT and ED will be provided in 10 weekly, individual treatment sessions of 60 minutes. The effectiveness of the randomization process will be tested by examining potential between condition differences on important demographic and pain-relevant descriptive variables, as well as on the dependent measures. Analyses of covariance will be employed to determine whether statistically significant differences in the two treatment conditions are observed at the 12- and 36-week intervals controlling for pretreatment/baseline scores on these same measures and other covariates identified previously. Hypotheses Treatment outcome hypotheses * Persons with DPNP receiving cognitive behavioral therapy with standard pharmaceutical care (CBT/SC), relative to those receiving diabetic education with standard pharmaceutical care (ED/SC), will demonstrate, immediately following treatment improvements on several measures of the experience of persistent pain, including pain intensity, pain quality, pain-related disability, sleep quality, physical functioning, and emotional functioning, and they will have fewer added pain medication doses and concomitant pain treatments. * Persons with DPNP receiving CBT/SC, relative to those receiving ED/SC, will demonstrate maintenance of these benefits at a 36-week post-baseline follow-up period. Treatment satisfaction and feasibility hypotheses \- Persons with DPNP receiving CBT/SC, relative to those receiving ED/SC, will demonstrate, immediately following treatment higher ratings of treatment credibility and treatment satisfaction, and higher rates of treatment session attendance and lower rates of treatment dropout. Exploratory secondary analyses of predictors of treatment participation and outcome * Increased readiness to adopt a self-management approach will be positively associated with higher ratings of treatment credibility and treatment satisfaction, higher rates of treatment session attendance and lower rates of treatment dropout, and for participants in the CBT condition only, higher rates of adherence to therapist recommendations for pain coping skill practice and other intersession goals. * Increased readiness to adopt a self-management approach over the course of treatment will be associated with improved outcomes following treatment. * Increased readiness to adopt a self-management approach at treatment termination will significantly predict maintenance of treatment benefits on follow-up. * Persons with medical and psychiatric comorbidities will demonstrate, relative to those without these comorbidities, less improved outcomes, lower rates of treatment session attendance and higher rates of treatment dropout, and for the CBT condition only, lower rates of adherence to therapist recommendations for pain coping skill practice and other intersession goals.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
47
Ten sessions of individual treatment delivered by a doctoral level psychologist.
Ten individual sessions of diabetes educations delivered by a doctoral level psychologist under the supervision of a certified diabetes educator.
VA Connecticut Healthcare System
West Haven, Connecticut, United States
VA Connecticute Health Care System
West Haven, Connecticut, United States
Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) Pain Intensity
Primary outcome is the estimated mean change in pain intensity ratings from baseline to 12 weeks post-baseline comparing CBT and Educational arms Average pain intensity rating over the last 7 days; 0 (no pain at all) to 10 (worst pain imaginable). The higher the score, the more perceived pain a participant reported.
Time frame: baseline to 12 weeks post-baseline [post-treatment]
Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) Pain Intensity
Primary outcome is the estimated mean change in pain intensity ratings from baseline to 36 weeks post-baseline comparing CBT and Educational arms Average pain intensity rating over the last 7 days; 0 (no pain at all) to 10 (worst pain imaginable); the higher the number, the greater percieved pain intensity.
Time frame: baseline to 36 weeks post-baseline [follow-up]
The Interference Subscale of the Multidimensional Pain Inventory (MPI)
Secondary outcome is the estimated mean change in pain interference from baseline to 12 weeks post-baseline comparing CBT to Education. Pain Interference at the time of assessment; 0 = no interference to 6 = extreme interference. The higher the average number calculated for the subscale, the higher the perceived interference pain has on vocational, social/recreational, and family/martital functioning.
Time frame: baseline to 12 weeks post-baseline [post-treatment]
Beck Depression Inventory (BDI)
Estimated mean change in depressive symptoms from baseline to 12 weeks post-baseline combaring CBT and ED. 0 (do not endorse) to 3 (highly endorse). no/minimal depressive symptoms =\<10; mild-moderate depressive symptoms = 10-18; moderate-severe depressive symptoms = 19-29 severe depressive symptoms = 30-63. The higher the score, the more depressive symptoms endorsed.
Time frame: baseline to 12 weeks post-baseline [post-treatment]
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The Interference Subscale of the Multidimensional Pain Inventory (MPI)
Secondary outcome is the estimated mean change in pain interference from baseline to 36 weeks post-baseline comparing CBT to Education. Pain Interference at the time of assessment; 0 = no interference to 6 = extreme interference. The higher the average number calculated for the subscale, the higher the perceived interference pain has on vocational, social/recreational, and family/martital functioning.
Time frame: baseline to 36 weeks post-baseline [follow-up]
Beck Depression Inventory (BDI)
Estimated mean change in depressive symptoms from baseline to 36 weeks post-baseline comparing CBT to Education. 0 (do not endorse) to 3 (highly endorse). no/minimal depressive symptoms =\<10; mild-moderate depressive symptoms = 10-18; moderate-severe depressive symptoms = 19-29 severe depressive symptoms = 30-63. The higher the score, the more depressive symptoms endorsed
Time frame: baseline to 36 weeks post-baseline [follow-up]