This will be a prospective randomized study to evaluate novel, clinically feasible, easily deliverable, pragmatic ways of preemptively modifying known CPSP and behavioral risk factors for acute to chronic pain transitions in adolescents before surgery. In addition, it will provide mechanistic insights and build a strong foundation for future large scale interventional studies that can impact outcomes positively in children undergoing surgery.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
92
Neurofeedback-assisted, technology-supported mindfulness via EEG-supported device delivered individually without the need for a facilitator or travel to training site. The device allows noninvasive neural activity recording from frontal and posterior brain regions. A dedicated smartphone application uses the EEG data to provide real-time adaptive feedback-modulating natural sounds to prompt user awareness of mind-wandering and intentional return to present experience. A smartphone app will guide patients through attention and focus on breath exercises. Patients will hear their distracted mind as the wind. Wind becomes stronger if their mind wanders, prompting patient's awareness of their wandering mind and guiding the patient back to focusing on their breath without judgment of how they are doing. Patients will be asked to practice mindfulness using the device for 20 minutes per day for 4 sessions prior to surgery.
Patients will receive mental health support by a licensed social work provider who is trained in mindfulness through four 20-minute telehealth sessions. Patients will be taught cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) techniques to reduce pain catastrophizing and increase coping efficacy, the clinician will review patient's current sleep routine and teach concepts and strategies to improve sleep. Patients will be guided through mindfulness and meditation exercises to improve pain and mood coping. Mindfulness-based instructions takes patients through quieting their mind by focusing on breath, expanding focus (i.e., "at the tip of their nose" "full flow of the breath"), with emphasis on acknowledgement of arising thoughts/emotions without judgement or emotional reaction, and return attention back to breath sensation. Principles of CBT and mindfulness will be reiterated at subsequent sessions.
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center (CCHMC)
Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
Functional Disability Index (FDI)
15-item survey that assesses the extent to which children experience difficulties in completing specific tasks (for example, walking to the bathroom, eating regular meals, and being at school all day).
Time frame: Baseline pre-intervention, post-operatively at 1 week, 2 weeks and 4 months.
Child and Adolescent Mindfulness Measure (CAMM)
10-item to assess 3 out of 4 facets of mindfulness: observing, acting with awareness and accepting without judgement. Scale is 0-40 with reverse scoring 0-4, 0 being never true, 4 being always true. Higher scores correspond to higher levels of mindfulness.
Time frame: Baseline pre-intervention, post-operatively at 1 week, 2 weeks and 3-4 months.
Child Anxiety Sensitivity Index (CASI)
18-item self-report tool designed to measure symptoms of anxiety in children and adolescents, with total scores ranging from 18-54. The CASI has demonstrated high internal consistency in both clinical and nonclinical samples (aged 8-15.8 years), good test-retest reliability and good construct validity.
Time frame: Baseline pre-intervention, post-operatively at 1 week, 2 weeks and 3-4 months.
Electronic Pain Diary and PainDETECT
Numerical rating pain scores of average pain intensity based on electronic pain ratings for one week, activity and sleep, using free phone application ("Manage my Pain" for Android and "Pain Diary" for iPhone users). PainDETECT assesses pain nature, with high sensitivity, specificity and positive predictive accuracy in pain conditions.
Time frame: Baseline pre-intervention, post-operatively at 1 week, 2 weeks and 3-4 months.
Perioperative Opioid use
Opioid use over 4 months (total morphine equivalent dose standardized by weight). Post-operative opioid use will be obtained from electronic medical record if patient was admitted, as well as by patient/family report.
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Control group, as defined by our institution's standard preoperative care for given procedure, which does not include psychological preparation.
Time frame: Postoperative inpatient (if applicable), 1 week, 2 weeks and 3-4 months postoperatively.
PROMIS pain interference-short form
8 items assessing how pain interferes with daily activities such as ambulating and doing school work. Total score range 8-40.
Time frame: Baseline pre-intervention, post-operatively at 1 week, 2 weeks and 3-4 months.
Pain Coping Efficacy
Evaluate pain coping as a mediator of association of the intervention with long-term functional and pain outcomes utilizing a 3-item subsurvey from a 39-item self-report questionnaire (PHQ pain coping questionnaire) to assess pain coping strategies and pain coping efficacy in children.
Time frame: Baseline pre-intervention, post-operatively at 1 week, 2 weeks and 3-4 months