Zhu Changfang, Esteller Rosana, Block Jessica, Lechleiter Kristen, Frey Robert, Moffitt Michael A
Research and Development, Boston Scientific Neuromodulation, Valencia, CA, United States.
Clinical Research, Boston Scientific Neuromodulation, Valencia, CA, United States.
Front Pain Res (Lausanne). 2024 Jan 31;4:1339892. doi: 10.3389/fpain.2023.1339892. eCollection 2023.
The societal burden of chronic pain and the contribution-in-part to the opioid crisis, is a strong motivation to improve and expand non-addictive treatments, including spinal cord stimulation (SCS). For several decades standard SCS has consisted in delivery of tonic pulses with static parameter settings in frequency, pulse width, and amplitude. These static parameters have limited ability to personalize the quality of paresthesia, the dermatomal coverage, and thus may affect SCS efficacy. Further, static settings may contribute to the build-up of tolerance or loss of efficacy of the therapy over time in some patients.
We conducted an acute exploratory study to evaluate the effects of SCS using time-dynamic pulses as compared to time-static (conventional tonic) stimulation pulses, with the hypotheses that dynamic pulse SCS may enable beneficial tailoring of the sensation and the patient's expectation for better pain relief with SCS. During a single clinic visit, consented subjects undergoing a standard SCS trial had their implanted leads temporarily connected to an investigational external stimulator capable of delivering time-static and six categories of time-dynamic pulse sequences, each characterized by continuously varying a stimulation parameter. Study subjects provided several assessments while blinded to the stimulation pattern, including: drawing of paresthesia maps, descriptions of sensation, and ratings for comfort and helpfulness to pain relief.
Even without optimization of the field location, a majority of subjects rated sensations from dynamic stimulation as better or equal to that of static stimulation for comfortableness and for helpfulness to pain relief. The initial data showed a gender and/or pain dermatomal location related preference to a stimulation pattern. In particular, female subjects and subjects with pain at higher dermatomes tended to rank the sensation from dynamic stimulation better. Dynamic stimulation produced greater pain coverage without optimization; in 70% (9/13) of subjects, maximal pain coverage was achieved with a dynamic stimulation pattern. There was also greater variety in the words used by patients to describe stimulation sensation in the free text and free form verbal descriptions associated with dynamic stimulation.
With the same electrode configuration and comparable parameter settings, acute SCS using dynamic pulses produced more positive ratings, expanded paresthesia coverage, and greater variation in sensation as compared to SCS using static pulses, suggesting that dynamic stimulation has the potential to improve capabilities of SCS for the treatment of chronic pain. Further study is warranted.
This study was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov under ID NCT02988713, November 2016 (URL: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02988713).
慢性疼痛的社会负担以及它在一定程度上对阿片类药物危机的推动,是改进和扩大非成瘾性治疗方法(包括脊髓刺激术(SCS))的强大动力。几十年来,标准的脊髓刺激术一直是通过频率、脉宽和幅度的静态参数设置来传递强直脉冲。这些静态参数在个性化感觉异常的质量、皮节覆盖范围方面能力有限,因此可能会影响脊髓刺激术的疗效。此外,在一些患者中,随着时间的推移,静态设置可能会导致耐受性的形成或治疗效果的丧失。
我们进行了一项急性探索性研究,以评估与时间静态(传统强直)刺激脉冲相比,使用时间动态脉冲进行脊髓刺激术的效果,假设动态脉冲脊髓刺激术可能有助于有益地调整感觉以及患者对脊髓刺激术更好缓解疼痛的期望。在一次门诊就诊期间,同意接受标准脊髓刺激术试验的受试者将其植入的电极暂时连接到一个能够传递时间静态和六类时间动态脉冲序列的研究性外部刺激器上,每个序列的特点是连续改变一个刺激参数。研究对象在对刺激模式不知情的情况下提供了多项评估,包括:绘制感觉异常图谱、描述感觉,以及对舒适度和缓解疼痛的帮助程度进行评分。
即使没有优化电场位置,大多数受试者对动态刺激的感觉在舒适度和缓解疼痛的帮助程度方面的评分高于或等于静态刺激。初步数据显示,存在与刺激模式相关的性别和/或疼痛皮节位置偏好。特别是,女性受试者和皮节较高部位疼痛的受试者往往对动态刺激的感觉评分更高。在未进行优化的情况下,动态刺激产生了更大的疼痛覆盖范围;在70%(9/13)的受试者中,动态刺激模式实现了最大疼痛覆盖。在与动态刺激相关的自由文本和自由形式的口头描述中,患者用于描述刺激感觉的词汇也有更多样性。
在相同的电极配置和可比的参数设置下,与使用静态脉冲的脊髓刺激术相比,使用动态脉冲的急性脊髓刺激术产生了更积极的评分、扩大了感觉异常覆盖范围,并且感觉变化更大,这表明动态刺激有可能提高脊髓刺激术治疗慢性疼痛的能力。有必要进行进一步研究。
本研究于2016年11月在ClinicalTrials.gov上注册,注册号为NCT02988713(网址:https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02988713)。