The purpose of this study is to determine if electrical stimulation (small levels of electricity) reduces post-stroke shoulder pain. This study involves a device called the Smartpatch System. The Smartpatch System delivers mild electrical stimulation to the muscles in the shoulder. The Smartpatch System includes a small wire (called a "Lead") that is placed through the skin into the muscle of the shoulder. It also includes a device worn on the body that delivers stimulation (called the Smartpatch Stimulator).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
88
The Smartpatch System is an Investigation Device which delivers mild electrical stimulation to the muscles in the shoulder. The Smartpatch System includes a small wire (called a "Lead") that is placed through the skin into the muscle of the shoulder. It also includes a device worn on the body that delivers stimulation (called the Smartpatch Stimulator).
Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Kessler Foundation Research Center
West Orange, New Jersey, United States
Weill Cornell Medical Center
New York, New York, United States
Carolinas Rehabilitation/Carolinas Healthcare
Charlotte, North Carolina, United States
The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center
Columbus, Ohio, United States
Change From Baseline Shoulder Pain Intensity at End of Treatment (EOT)
A diary was used in the study to capture daily worst shoulder pain intensity over a 7-day period. The diary included a pain intensity question asked each day to the subject. The pain intensity question is excerpted from the Brief Pain Inventory - Short Form Question 3 (BPI-3) and is stated as "please rate your pain by circling the one number that best describes your pain at its worst in the last 24 hours". BPI-3 is a scale of 0 to 10 where 0 represents no pain and 10 represents worst pain. The median scores were calculated for each diary period. The median diary score at End of Treatment (EOT) was compared to the median baseline diary score to calculate the change in pain intensity. The group mean of the median scores for treatment was compared to the group mean of the medians scores for the control group at baseline and at EOT.
Time frame: Baseline, End of Treatment (4-weeks of Treatment/Control)
Number of Participants With Device Related Adverse Event Rates in Treatment and Control Groups
At each study visit following the baseline assessment, subjects were questioned if any changes in their medical status or condition had occurred. If the change was an adverse event, an adverse event form was completed by the site.
Time frame: 16 weeks total - 4 weeks from baseline visit to EOT visit, followed by 12 weeks post-treatment
Change From Baseline Shoulder Pain Interference at End of Treatment
The degree to which shoulder pain interferes with daily activities was assessed using Question 9 of the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI-9) collected from the BPI Short Form administered during clinic visits. This question asks the subject to rate the degree to which their pain has interfered with general activity, mood, walking ability, normal work, relations with other people, sleep, and enjoyment of life on a scale of 0 to 10, where 0 is "does not interfere" and 10 is "completely interferes" within the last week. The mean of these seven scores will be calculated to obtain the pain interference score.
Time frame: Baseline, End of Treatment (4-weeks of Treatment/Control)
Durability of Change From Baseline Shoulder Pain Intensity at 12-weeks Beyond Treatment
A diary was used in the study to capture daily worst shoulder pain intensity over a 7-day period. The diary included a pain intensity question asked each day to the subject. The pain intensity question is excerpted from the Brief Pain Inventory - Short Form Question 3 (BPI-3) and is stated as "please rate your pain by circling the one number that best describes your pain at its worst in the last 24 hours". BPI-3 is a scale of 0 to 10 where 0 represents no pain and 10 represents worst pain. The median scores were calculated for each diary period. The median diary score at 12 weeks post-treatment was compared to the median baseline diary score to calculate the change in pain intensity. The group mean of the median scores for 12 weeks post-treatment was compared to the group mean of the median scores for the control group at baseline.
Time frame: Baseline, 12-wks post-treatment
Change From Baseline Quality of Life at End of Treatment
The Medical Outcomes Study Short Form (SF-36v2) was administered at clinic visits to assess the impact of peripheral nerve stimulation on the subject's health-related quality of life. The SF-36v2 is a generic health survey designed to assess basic physical functioning and emotional well-being regardless of the disease or treatment. The 36 questions were grouped into two components: physical and mental. The survey was scored using norm-based scoring algorithm where a score of 0 indicates maximum disability and a score of 100 indicates no disability. Change in each component score was derived from End of Treatment score minus baseline score.
Time frame: Baseline, End of Treatment (4-weeks of Treatment/Control)
Change From Baseline Average Pain Intensity at End of Treatment
A diary was used in the study to capture daily average shoulder pain intensity over a 7-day period. The diary included a pain intensity question asked each day to the subject. The pain intensity question is excerpted from the Brief Pain Inventory - Short Form Question 5 (BPI-5) and is stated as "please rate your pain by circling the one number that best describes your pain on the average". BPI-5 is a scale of 0 to 10 where 0 represents no pain and 10 represents worst pain. The mean scores were calculated for each diary period. The mean diary score at End of Treatment (EOT) was compared to the mean baseline diary score to calculate the change in pain intensity.
Time frame: Baseline, End of Treatment (4-weeks of Treatment/Control)
Patient Global Impression of Change at End of Treatment
The Patient Global Impression of Change (PGIC) scale was administered at EOT to assess subject perception of overall improvement and patient preferences. The PGIC scale asks subjects to rate their improvement with treatment on a 7-point scale (centered at 4) that ranges from "very much worse" to "very much improved" relative to baseline.
Time frame: End of Treatment (4-weeks of Treatment/Control)
Change in Pain Medication Usage at End of Treatment
Subjects completed 7-day diaries, in which they listed all pain medications they took during the 7 days. A blinded third party medication committee reviewed medications collected for each 7-day diary period and scored medication changes, in comparison to the baseline diary medications as "no change" (no change in dosage or change is not clinically meaningful to impact pain outcomes), "increase" (clinically meaningful increase in medication that would impact pain outcomes), or "decrease" (clinically meaningful decrease in medication that would impact pain outcomes).
Time frame: End of Treatment (4-weeks of Treatment/Control)
Clinical Global Impression of Improvement at End of Treatment
The Blinded Evaluator rated each subject enrolled at their site using a question adapted from the Clinical Global Impression (CGI) scale, known as the Clinical Global Impression-Improvement scale (CGI-I). For the CGI-I, a Blinded Evaluator was asked to rate the subject's total improvement compared to their condition at baseline. The CGI-I uses a 7-point scale (centered at 4) that ranges from "very much worse" to "very much improved".
Time frame: End of Treatment (4-weeks of Treatment/Control)
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