Reckziegel Diane, Bailey Helen, Cottam William J, Tench Christopher R, Mahajan Ravi P, Walsh David A, Knaggs Roger D, Auer Dorothee P
Arthritis Research UK Pain Centre, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
Sir Peter Mansfield Imaging Centre, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
BMJ Open. 2017 Jun 26;7(6):e014013. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-014013.
Osteoarthritis (OA) pain is a major cause of long-term disability and chronic pain in the adult population. One in five patients does not receive satisfactory pain relief, which reflects the complexity of chronic pain and the current lack of understanding of mechanisms of chronic pain. Recently, duloxetine has demonstrated clinically relevant pain relief, but only in half of treated patients with OA. Here, the aim is to investigate the neural mechanisms of pain relief and neural signatures that may predict treatment response to duloxetine in chronic knee OA pain.
This is an ongoing single-centre randomised placebo-controlled mechanistic study (2:1 (placebo) allocation), using a multimodal neuroimaging approach, together with psychophysiological (quantitative sensory testing), genetics and questionnaire assessments. Eighty-one subjects with chronic knee OA pain are planned to power for between-group comparisons (placebo, duloxetine responder and duloxetine non-responder). Participants have a baseline assessment and, following 6 weeks of duloxetine (30 mg for 2 weeks, then 60 mg for 4 weeks), a follow-up evaluation. Brain imaging is performed at 3T with blood-oxygen-level dependent functional MRI at rest and during pin-prick nociceptive stimulation for main outcome assessment; arterial spin labelling and structural imaging (T1-weighted) for secondary outcome assessment. Questionnaires evaluate pain, negative affect, quality of sleep and cognition.
The study has been approved by the East Midlands, Nottingham and is being carried out under the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki (64th, 2013) and Good Clinical Practice standards. Results will be disseminated in peer-reviewed journals and at scientific conferences.
This trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02208778).This work was supported by Arthritis Research UK (Grant 18769).
骨关节炎(OA)疼痛是成年人群长期残疾和慢性疼痛的主要原因。五分之一的患者疼痛缓解效果不理想,这反映了慢性疼痛的复杂性以及目前对慢性疼痛机制的认识不足。最近,度洛西汀已显示出具有临床意义的疼痛缓解效果,但仅在一半接受治疗的OA患者中有效。在此,目的是研究疼痛缓解的神经机制以及可能预测度洛西汀对慢性膝OA疼痛治疗反应的神经特征。
这是一项正在进行的单中心随机安慰剂对照机制研究(按2:1(安慰剂)分配),采用多模态神经影像学方法,结合心理生理学(定量感觉测试)、遗传学和问卷调查评估。计划纳入81名患有慢性膝OA疼痛的受试者,以进行组间比较(安慰剂组、度洛西汀反应者和度洛西汀无反应者)。参与者进行基线评估,并在服用度洛西汀6周(前2周30mg,后4周60mg)后进行随访评估。在3T条件下进行脑成像,通过静息态和针刺伤害性刺激期间的血氧水平依赖性功能磁共振成像进行主要结局评估;通过动脉自旋标记和结构成像(T1加权)进行次要结局评估。问卷调查评估疼痛、负面情绪、睡眠质量和认知。
该研究已获得东米德兰兹、诺丁汉地区伦理委员会批准,并按照《赫尔辛基宣言》(2013年第64版)和良好临床实践标准开展。研究结果将在同行评审期刊和科学会议上发表。
本试验已在ClinicalTrials.gov注册(NCT02208778)。本研究得到英国关节炎研究协会(资助号18769)的支持。