Back Pain Consortium (BACPAC): Protocol and Pilot Study Results for a Randomized Comparative-Effectiveness Trial of Antidepressants, Fear Avoidance Rehabilitation, or the Combination for Chronic Low Back Pain and Comorbid High Negative Affect

Ajay D. Wasan, Robert R. Edwards, Kevin L. Kraemer, Jong Jeong, Megan Kenney, Kevin Luong, Marise C. Cornelius, Caitlin Mickles, Bhagya Dharmaraj, Essa Sharif, Anita Stoltenberg, Trent Emerick, Jordan F. Karp, Matt J. Bair, Steven Z. George, William M. Hooten

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objective: Patients with chronic low back pain (CLBP) and comorbid depression or anxiety disorders are highly prevalent. Negative affect (NA) refers to a combination of negative thoughts, emotions, and behaviors. Patients with CLBP with high NA have greater pain, worse treatment outcomes, and greater prescription opioid misuse. We present the protocol for SYNNAPTIC (SYNergizing Negative Affect & Pain Treatment In Chronic pain). Design: A randomized comparative-effectiveness study of antidepressants, fear-avoidance rehabilitation, or their combination in 300 patients with CLBP with high NA. In the antidepressant- or rehabilitation-only arms, SYNNAPTIC includes an adaptive design of re-randomization after 4 months for nonresponders. Setting: A multisite trial conducted in routine pain clinical treatment settings: pain clinics and physical and occupational therapy treatment centers. Methods: Inclusion criteria include CLBP with elevated depression and anxiety symptoms. Antidepressant and rehabilitation treatments follow validated and effective protocols for musculoskeletal pain in patients with high NA. Power and sample size are based on superior outcomes of combination therapy with these same treatments in a 71-subject 4-arm pilot randomized controlled trial. Conclusions: SYNNAPTIC addresses the lack of evidence-based protocols for the treatment of the vulnerable subgroup of patients with CLBP and high NA. We hypothesize that combination therapy of antidepressants plus fear-avoidance rehabilitation will be more effective than each treatment alone.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)S105-S114
JournalPain Medicine (United States)
Volume24
Issue number1 S
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 1 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • chronic low back pain
  • comparative effectiveness
  • negative affect
  • randomized trial

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Medicine

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