The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if a psychotherapy intervention works to relieve widespread pain in patients with lupus. The main questions it aims to answer are: Is the psychotherapy treatment safe for lupus patients? Are lupus patients able to complete the treatment? Can the treatment help improve chronic pain and other symptoms in lupus patients? Researchers will compare the treatment to a control (participants who will continue their medical treatment but will not receive psychotherapy for the time frame of the treatment) to see if the psychotherapy treatment works to relieve widespread pain and other lupus-related symptoms. Participants will: Fill out questionnaires before and after the treatment. Participate in 8 weekly treatment sessions, 2 hours per session, delivered via Zoom from their own home. Keep a list of medications and monitor any changes in their medication regimen.
Lupus is a serious and lifelong illness, causing flare-ups and damage to organs. It leads to a higher risk of death and a lower quality of life. Difficult life experiences, such as trauma or childhood adversity, are more common in people with lupus and fibromyalgia. These early experiences also raise the risk of anxiety, depression, and developing lupus later in life. This study will test a new therapy, Emotional Awareness and Expression Therapy (EAET). EAET helps people understand and express emotions related to difficult past experiences, which may reduce physical pain and improve overall health. This study wants to see if EAET will help people with lupus who also suffer from chronic widespread pain (or fibromyalgia) and is safe. Participants in the study will be randomly assigned to receive EAET therapy via telehealth or to a waiting list. The study will see if the treatment helps reduce lupus flares, pain, fatigue, anxiety, depression, and improve quality of life and sleep. The EAET group will attend eight two-hour online group therapy sessions once a week for 8 weeks. This group will also complete homework for about 30 minutes a day during participation. The wait list group will wait for 8 weeks until the EAET group is done. Both groups will complete surveys. The wait list group can choose to participate in the next therapy group session.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
30
EAET is a novel psychotherapy based on the well-supported finding that adverse, stressful, or traumatic life experiences result in maladaptive emotional experiences that can trigger or amplify pain and other symptoms. EAET showed promising results in fibromyalgia and migraines, as well as musculoskeletal pain, and was found to be more efficacious than CBT, the recommended treatment for chronic pain.
University of Utah
Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
RECRUITINGWidespread pain index at baseline
A licensed rheumatologist will ask participants to identify 19 areas where they felt pain over the past week. The score ranges from 0 to 19 (the number of bodily regions).
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 8 weeks
Widespread pain index a week after treatment compared to baseline
A licensed rheumatologist will ask participants how many body areas they felt pain in during the week after treatment. The score ranges from 0 to 19, and the change in score will be compared with the baseline score. A lower score after treatment indicates the treatment's effectiveness in reducing widespread pain.
Time frame: 9 weeks after commencement of treatment
Symptom Severity Score at baseline
A licensed rheumatologist will evaluate the symptom severity and somatic symptoms over the past week at baseline using a 0-3 scale.
Time frame: 1 week before the treatment
Change in the severity scale after treatment compared to baseline.
A change in symptom severity will be evalauted by comparing the symptom severity score after treatment to baseline. A lower severity score after treatment indicates the treatment's effectiveness in reducing somatic symptoms.
Time frame: 9 weeks after commencement of treatment
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Disease Activity Index (SLEDAI) at baseline.
A licensed rheumatologist will evaluate the disease activity using the SLEDAI questionnaire at baseline. The scale ranges from 0 to 105. 0 indicates no disease activity; 1-5, mild disease activity; 6-10, a clinically meaningful cutoff indicating moderate disease activity; 11-19, high disease activity; and 20 or more, very high disease activity.
Time frame: A week before treatment
Change in SLEDAI measure after treatment compared to baseline.
A licensed rheumatologist will evaluate the disease activity using the SLEDAI questionnaire after treatment. A lower score after treatment indicates the treatment's effectiveness in reducing lupus disease activity.
Time frame: 9 weeks after commencement of treatment
Lupus-specific quality of life (LupusQol) index at baseline.
Lupus-related quality of life will be evaluated using the LupusQol questionnaire, which participants will complete. Scores range from 0 to 100. Higher scores indicate a higher quality of life.
Time frame: 1 week before commencement of treatment
Change in lupus-related quality of life after treatment compared to baseline.
Changes in Lupus-related quality of life will be evaluated by comparing scores on the LupusQol questionnaire after treatment with baseline scores. Higher scores indicate that the therapy increased participants' quality of life.
Time frame: 9 weeks following commencement of treatment
Fatigue at baseline
Fatigue will be evaluated at baseline using the patient-administered Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy - Fatigue Scale (FACIT-Fatigue). The score ranges from 0 to 52. A higher score indicates higher fatigue.
Time frame: 1 week before commencement of treatment
Change in fatigue score after treatment compared to baseline.
The FACIT-Fatigue scale will be administered after treatment, and the score will be compared with the baseline. A lower score indicates that the therapy improved fatigue.
Time frame: 9 weeks following commencement of treatment
Anxiety levels at baseline.
Anxiety will be measured using the Patient Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS) short anxiety questionnaire. The minimum value is 8, and the maximum value is 40. A higher score on this test indicates higher levels of anxiety.
Time frame: 1 week before the treatment.
Change in anxiety levels after treatment compared to baseline.
A change in anxiety will be evaluated by comparing the PROMIS anxiety questionnaire score after treatment to baseline. A lower anxiety score after treatment will indicate the effectiveness of treatment in reducing anxiety.
Time frame: 9 weeks after commencement of treatment
Depression levels at baseline.
Depression will be measured using the Patient Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS) short depression questionnaire. The minimum score is 8, and the maximum score is 40. A higher score indicates a higher level of depression.
Time frame: 1 week before treatment
Change in depression after treatment compared to baseline.
A Change in depression score will be evaluated by comparing the PROMIS depression questionnaire score after treatment vs. baseline. A lower score will indicate the effectiveness of treatment in relieving depression.
Time frame: 9 weeks after commencement of treatment.
Sleep disturbance at baseline.
Sleep disturbance will be evalauted using the patient-administered PROMIS- sleep disturbance short form. The scores range from 8 to 40, with higher scores indicating a greater severity of sleep disturbance.
Time frame: 1 week prior to the commencement of therapy
Change in sleep disturbance after treatment compared to baseline.
The sleep disturbance score will be collected after treatment and compared with the baseline score. A lower score indicates that the therapy reduced sleep disturbance.
Time frame: 9 weeks after the commencement of treatment
Sleep-related impairment at baseline.
Sleep-related impairment will be evalauted using the participant-administered PROMIS sleep-related impairment short form 8a. The scores range from 8 to 40, with higher scores indicating greater sleep-related impairment.
Time frame: 1 week before commencement of treatment
Change in sleep impairment after treatment compared to baseline.
Sleep-related impairment will be scored after treatment and compared to the baseline score. A reduction in overall score indicates that the treatment was effective in reducing sleep-related impairment.
Time frame: 9 weeks after commencement of treatment.
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