SPRINT: Signature for Pain Recovery in Teens

Last updated: November 21, 2024
Sponsor: Stanford University
Overall Status: Active - Not Recruiting

Phase

N/A

Condition

Chronic Pain

Joint Injuries

Acute Pain

Treatment

N/A

Clinical Study ID

NCT04285112
2019-1006
52963
  • Ages 11-18
  • All Genders
  • Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Study Summary

To identify biological and phenotypic prognostic markers of recovery vs. persistence of pain and functional disability in adolescents with chronic musculoskeletal pain.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. The child has a diagnosis of Chronic widespread pain or Chronic primarymusculoskeletal pain (other than orofacial) derived from ICD-11 (MG30.0; chronicprimary pain is pain in 1 or more anatomic regions that persists for > 3 months, isassociated with significant distress or functional disability and cannot be betterexplained by another chronic pain condition (e.g., arthritis, lupus)

  2. Age between 11-18 years

  3. Moderate to Severe Functional Disability (FDI ≥13)

  4. English proficiency (reading, speaking)

  5. Moderate to severe average pain (VAS ≥30/100)

Exclusion

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Significant cognitive impairment (e.g., severe brain injury)

  2. Claustrophobia

  3. Significant medical disease (e.g., systemic or central nervous system)

  4. Severe psychiatric or neurological conditions (e.g., eating disorder, psychosis)

  5. Pregnancy

  6. MRI incompatibility (braces, pacemaker)

  7. Weight > 285 lbs.

  8. History of > 1 month opioid treatment.

Study Design

Total Participants: 275
Study Start date:
September 28, 2020
Estimated Completion Date:
December 31, 2025

Study Description

Up to 5% of adolescents (~3.5 million in the US alone) suffer from high impact chronic musculoskeletal (MSK) pain, affecting all life domains and posing a significant economic burden. Current treatments for chronic MSK pain are suboptimal and have been tied to the opioid crisis. Only ~50% of adolescents with chronic MSK pain who present for multidisciplinary pain treatment recover, as measured by clinical endpoints of pain severity and functional disability. Discovery of robust markers of the recovery vs. persistence of pain and disability is essential to develop more resourceful and patient-specific treatment strategies and to conceive novel approaches that benefit patients who are refractory. Given that chronic pain is a biopsychosocial process, the discovery and validation of a prognostic and robust signature for pain recovery vs. persistence requires measurements across multiple dimensions in the same patient cohort in combination with a suitable 'big data' computational analysis pipeline for the extraction of reliable and cross-validated results from a multilayered and complex dataset. The research team is well positioned to execute the study aims with: (1) A highly skilled and experienced team of scientists and clinicians from Stanford University, University of Toronto/Hospital for Sick Children, and Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center; (2) A standardized specimen collection, processing, storage, and distribution system, leveraging Stanford Biobank's platform, BioCatalyst, to aggregate the sample inventory with clinical annotations for an accessible, virtual biobank, within the Signature of Pain Recovery IN Teens (SPRINT) Biobank and Analysis Core (SBAC); (3) Cutting-edge preliminary data implicating novel candidates for neuroimaging, immune, quantitative sensory, and psychological markers for discovery; and (4) Expertise in machine learning approaches to extract reliable and prognostic bio-signatures from a large and complex data set. The research team expects that the results from this project will facilitate risk stratification in patients with chronic MSK, a more resourceful selection of patients who are likely to respond for undergoing current multidisciplinary pain treatment approaches, and new insight into biological and behavioral processes that may be exploited to develop novel strategies profiting those who are refractory.

For the R61/Discovery Phase Aim individuals will be thoroughly characterized via biological (i.e. brain structure and function, immune, sensory profiles), psychological state, and clinical endpoint (i.e., pain intensity, disability) data. Unbiased machine learning algorithms will identify a multivariate model comprised of the most prognostic biological, psychological, and clinical endpoints. The model will classify adolescents with and without resolving chronic MSK pain after a state-of-the art multidisciplinary pain treatment intervention. R33/Validation Phase Aim will validate the biological signature derived in the R61 study. This signature will be useful for a range of adolescent-based clinical trials in which identification of the highest risk individuals is necessary, providing a clinically actionable intervention algorithm.

Connect with a study center

  • Hospital for Sick Children

    Toronto, Ontario M5G 1X8
    Canada

    Site Not Available

  • University of Barcelona

    Barcelona,
    Spain

    Site Not Available

  • Stanford University

    Palo Alto, California 94304
    United States

    Site Not Available

  • Cincinnati Children's Hospital

    Cincinnati, Ohio 45229
    United States

    Site Not Available

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