The hypothesis of this study is that pregabalin, 150 mg bid, will reduce general daytime pain in patients diagnosed with diabetic peripheral neuropathy and that it will also reduce the level of pain associated with walking. Consequently, it is hypothesized that the reduction in pain will result in an increase in the amount of walking they do during the day, improvements in their gait, balance, risk of falls and sleep patterns.
Pregabalin (LYRICA®) is a potent and specific ligand at the alpha-2-delta subunit of voltage-gated calcium channels. It is currently approved for adjunctive therapy for neuropathic pain conditions. Patients with diabetic peripheral neuropathy suffer from pain in their feet which interferes with their ability to walk which includes less walking, an altered gait, and altered balance. At night the peripheral neuropathy also interferes with their sleep patterns.The hypothesis of this study is that pregabalin, 150 mg bid, will reduce general daytime pain in patients diagnosed with diabetic peripheral neuropathy and that it will also reduce the level of pain associated with walking. Consequently, it is hypothesized that the reduction in pain will result in an increase in the amount of walking they do during the day, improvements in their gait, balance, risk of falls and sleep patterns.Pain and sleep quality will be assessed with questionnaires but objective measurements will be used to assess gait, balance, daytime activities (including walking) and sleep patterns. Statistical Power Calculations were based on the fact that this is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, 2-period crossover study to be conducted at a single site. Comparisons will be drawn at baseline, at the completion of each 6 weeks of treatment/placebo arm. The study has been powered at 0.80 for a two-tail analysis with a sensitivity to detect a 30% delta in pain perception in 40 subjects. From previous studies, the cross-over design suggested has achieved significance with 20 patients per group. Forty-four patients will be recruited in total. Significance will be established at an alpha level of 0.05. Both parametric and non parametric correlations will be carried out between the different variables measured and progressive logistic regression to determine the relative contributions of pain relief on the primary and secondary variables being measured in the study.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
150mg bid
150mg bid
Eastern Virgnia Medical School, Strelitz Diabetes Center
Norfolk, Virginia, United States
Strelitz Diabetes Center
Norfolk, Virginia, United States
Decrease in fall risk associated with walking assessed with the Physiological Profile Assesment
The falls risk will also be ascertained using the long-form Physiological Profile Assessment. The Physiological Profile Assessment has been validated in prospective studies of falls in both community and institutional settings, and predicts those at increased risk of falling with 75-79% accuracy. The Physiological Profile Assessment includes tests of vision (edge contrast sensitivity, high/low contrast visual acuity, depth perception), sensation (ankle touch sensitivity, leg proprioception), leg muscle strength (knee flexion, knee extensors, ankle dorsiflexion), postural sway and postural coordination. Scores from each of these physiologic tests are combined to provide an overall fall risk score that ranges from -2 (very low risk) to +4 (very marked risk).
Time frame: Up to 6 months
Patient-assessed change in pain intensity assessed with an 11-point scale
Based on an 11-point scale assessed after walking 50 ft in a laboratory setting.
Time frame: Up to 6 months
Sleep quality assessed with the Medical Outcomes Study Sleep Scale questionnaire
assessed at home with the Medical Outcomes Study Sleep Scale questionnaire to be completed in the morning.
Time frame: Up to 6 months
Patient Global Impression of Change (PGIC)
Patients will record pain and sleep information in diaries. The Patient Global Impression of Change is a 7-point scale on which patients will rate any change in their overall status that they had experienced since beginning study medication from much improved to much worse. The Patient Global Impression of Change is also a 7-point scale on which the clinician rated the change observed in the patient's overall status since the beginning of the study.
Time frame: Up to 6 months
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Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
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