EPPIC: Easing Pelvic Pain Interventions Clinical Research Program

Last updated: November 8, 2024
Sponsor: State University of New York at Buffalo
Overall Status: Active - Recruiting

Phase

N/A

Condition

Chronic Pain

Gynecological Infections

Prostate Disorders

Treatment

Minimal Contact-Cognitive Behavior Therapy

Patient Education/Support

Clinical Study ID

NCT05127616
STUDY00005691
NIH Grant/1R01DK128927
  • Ages 18-70
  • All Genders

Study Summary

The EPPIC (Easing Pelvic Pain Interventions Clinical Research Program) study evaluates an ultra-brief, 4 session cognitive behavioral pain treatment transdiagnostic in design for urologic chronic pain syndrome (UCPPS) with clinical and practical advantages over existing behavioral therapies whose length and focus limits their adoption by clinicians and coverage for mechanistically similar comorbidities. A theoretically informed, practical, empirically grounded approach will systematically unpack CBT's working mechanisms, clarify for whom it works, ease dissemination, appeal to patients, providers, payers, and policy makers in the COVID-19 era favoring low resource intensity treatments, and reduce cost and inefficiencies associated with high intensity therapies whose complexity, length, and scarcity restricts uptake and impact.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Ages 18-70 years (inclusive)

  • Male or female

  • All genders, races, ethnic groups

  • MD-confirmed diagnosis of IC/BPS or CP/CPPS by study urologist or urogynecologist

  • Pelvic pain including uncomfortable sensations of pressure or discomfort that arenot described as outright pain) of at least six months duration

  • Pelvic pain intensity of at least moderate severity (defined as 3 or greater on a 0-10 Numerical Rating Scale and causes life interference weekly and limit(s)participant's life or work-related activities, general activity level, and/orenjoyment of life) over the past 3 months.

  • Ability to understand and provide informed consent

  • Either not taking medications or if taking medications willing to refrain fromstarting new medications until after the initial 2-week pre-treatment baselineperiod ends unless medically necessary.

  • A minimum 6th grade reading level based on the Wide Range Achievement Test (WRAT 4)

  • Willing to be randomized to either CBT or Support/Education and to follow theprotocol to which s/he has been assigned

  • Willing to be contacted for follow up assessments at week 12 and 3, 6 months aftertreatment ends

  • Willing to attend sessions

  • Able to maintain symptom diaries and complete paper work

  • Access to telephone and computer or smartphone

  • Willing and able to provide adequate information for locator purposes

Exclusion

Exclusion Criteria: Urologic-Specific

  • Presence of a neurological condition (e.g., MS, Parkinson's disease, paraplegia)affecting the bladder

  • The presence of a symptomatic urethral stricture (males only)

  • History of cystitis caused by tuberculosis or radiation or chemotherapies

  • Participant has been diagnosed and treated for a pelvic-related malignancy (colon,bladder, prostate, ovarian, endometrial, uterine, testicular, penile, cervical,vaginal, or rectal cancer)

Exclusion Criteria: General

  • Participant has a medical condition(s) whose nature or severity (unstable, lifethreatening, etc.) would influence adversely the conduct of the clinical trial,confound interpretation of study results, and/or compromise volunteer safety andengagement with study demands.

  • Gross cognitive impairment, deafness, blindness, vision problems (severe), hearingproblems (severe)

  • Has a major psychiatric disorder which would impede conduct of the clinical study.These clinical disorders would include but are not limited to major depression witha high risk of suicidal behavior (i.e. intent or plan), current or recent (withinthe past 3 months) history of alcohol or substance abuse/dependence, a lifetimehistory of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder; or organic mental disorder

  • Current involvement in psychotherapy directed specifically toward relief ofurological symptoms

  • Schedule does not permit participation in clinic sessions or home practice includingplans to move out of the area, lack of reliable transportation, etc.

  • Characteristics related to inability to complete the study protocol

  • Unable to read or fluently speak English

  • Inability to complete screening visits

  • Inaccessible for interventions and/or follow up evaluations

Study Design

Total Participants: 240
Treatment Group(s): 2
Primary Treatment: Minimal Contact-Cognitive Behavior Therapy
Phase:
Study Start date:
August 10, 2022
Estimated Completion Date:
May 31, 2026

Study Description

Urologic chronic pelvic pain syndrome (UCPPS) encompasses several common, costly diagnoses including interstitial cystitis/bladder pain syndrome and chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome that are poorly understood and inadequately treated. Their prolonged personal and economic costs are amplified by the frequent co-occurrence of a cluster of centralized pain conditions (particularly irritable bowel syndrome 3 [IBS]) but also fibromyalgia [FMS], chronic headache, chronic fatigue, etc.) called Chronic Overlapping Pain Conditions (COPC). Clinically, the notion that these syndromes share a centralized pain phenotype with a fundamental disturbance in pain or sensory processing dovetails with our preliminary research showing that a novel transdiagnostic behavioral treatment emphasizing a single common mechanistic pathway (i.e. inflexible cognitive style) reduces severity of both targeted (IBS) and untargeted multisymptom COPCs that include (but is not limited to) to UCPPS, FMS, chronic fatigue, and chronic headache. If effective in a larger scale study, a transdiagnostic UCPPS treatment would offer a more efficient, accessible, and broadly useful strategy for improving chronic pelvic pain and its most frequent and complicating comorbidities. To this end, the investigators will randomize 240 UCPPS subjects (18-70 yrs.) of any gender and race to a 4-session version of CBT that teaches skills for self-managing UCPPS symptoms (e.g. pelvic pain, urinary symptoms such as urinary frequency, urgency) with minimal clinician oversight (MC-CBT) or a four-session non-specific education/support control (EDU). Efficacy assessments will be administered at pre-treatment baseline and two weeks after the end of the 10-week acute phase using the patient version of the Clinical Global Impressions Scale and validated with the physician version rated by MD assessors blind to treatment assignment. The investigators hypothesize MC-CBT will deliver significantly greater UCPPS symptom improvement than EDU (Aim 1). Additional aims include characterizing the durability of effects 3- and 6 months post treatment (Aim 2). To increase the efficacy and efficiency of behavioral pain treatments, the investigators draw upon Beck's transdiagnostic cognitive model to characterize the precise cognitive procedures and corresponding operative processes (e.g., cognitive distancing, context sensitivity, coping flexibility, repetitive negative thought) that drive MC-CBT induced UCPPS symptom relief relative to EDU (Aim 3) as well as baseline patient variables that moderate differential response (Aim 3) with the ultimate goal of more proactive patient-treatment matching fundamental to the goals of personalized medicine. By applying innovative statistical modelling (e.g. dominance analysis, Randomized Explanatory Trial analyses) to study aims in the context of a rigorously designed behavioral trial, the researchers expand the portfolio of nondrug pain treatments for UCPPS and co-aggregating COPCs to include one whose brevity, convenience, and transdiagnostic design "meets patients where they are" and addresses the practical (access, complexity, cost), clinical (breadth, durability, magnitude of effects, patient preference) and conceptual (untargeted comorbidities, non-pain somatic symptoms) challenges that have impeded uptake and public health impact of evidence-based behavioral pain treatments at a time when our most vulnerable high impact pain patients are in greatest need.

Connect with a study center

  • UCLA

    Los Angeles, California 90095-7378
    United States

    Site Not Available

  • University of Michigan

    Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-5330
    United States

    Site Not Available

  • University at Buffalo (the only clinical site where treatment is delivered)

    Buffalo, New York 14215
    United States

    Active - Recruiting

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