Purpose

The goal of this study is to test two behavioral interventions for chronic insomnia in individuals with chronic pain and use prescribed opioid medication to treat their chronic pain.

Conditions

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Over 18 Years
Eligible Sex
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Yes

Inclusion Criteria

  • 18+ yrs - willing to be randomized, - can read/understand English - diagnosed with chronic widespread pain and insomnia (as described below) - prescribed opioid medication for 1+ mo, 3+ times per week - desire to reduce or eliminate opioid use - written agreement from physician prescribing opioid medication - no prescribed or OTC sleep meds for 1+ mo, or stabilized on meds for 6+ wks

Exclusion Criteria

  • unable to provide informed consent - cognitive impairment (MMSE <26) - sleep disorder other than insomnia [i.e., sleep apnea (apnea/hypopnea index, AHI >15) - Periodic Limb Movement Disorder (myoclonus arousals per hour >15)] - bipolar or seizure disorder (due to risk of sleep restriction treatment) - other severe, untreated major psychopathology except for depression or anxiety (e.g.,suicidal ideation/intent, psychotic disorders) - psychotropic or other medications (e.g., beta-blockers) that alter pain or sleep (medications prescribed for pain or sleep are allowed) - participation in other non-pharmacological treatment for pain, sleep, or mood outside the current trial - internal metal objects or electrical devices - pregnancy - presumptive/confirmed lumbar nerve root compression - confirmed lumbar spinal stenosis - <6 mos post-back surgery - other spinal disorders

Study Design

Phase
N/A
Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel Assignment
Primary Purpose
Treatment
Masking
Triple (Participant, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
Experimental
Experimental
8 weeks of online CBT-I (1 session/week for 1 hour), followed by tapered withdrawal and motivational interviewing and check-ins.
  • Behavioral: CBT-I
    Includes 8 weekly sessions of CBT-I and 2 bi-monthly boosters. Each session is to be completed individually by the participant in a single sitting (less than 45 mins). Each session should be completed in 7 days with next session released only after prior one completed.
  • Other: Tapered Withdrawal
    Individualized gradual tapered withdrawal following CDC guidelines, additional check-ins and motivational interviewing with a therapist.
Other
Treatment as usual
Continuation of standard treatment for sleep and pain for 8 weeks, followed by tapered withdrawal and motivational interviewing and check-ins.
  • Behavioral: Treatment as usual
    Includes 8 weekly sessions of standard treatment and 2 bi-monthly boosters. Each session is to be completed individually by the participant in a single sitting (less than 45 mins). Each session should be completed in 7 days with next session released only after prior one completed.
  • Other: Tapered Withdrawal
    Individualized gradual tapered withdrawal following CDC guidelines, additional check-ins and motivational interviewing with a therapist.

Recruiting Locations

University of South Florida
Tampa 4174757, Florida 4155751 33612
Contact:
Christina S McCrae, PhD
813-974-1804
christinamccrae@usf.edu

More Details

Status
Recruiting
Sponsor
University of South Florida

Study Contact

Christina S McCrae, PhD
8139741804
christinamccrae@usf.edu

Detailed Description

Opioid therapy is commonly prescribed for patients with chronic widespread musculoskeletal pain, but offers questionable benefit for long-term pain management and is associated with arrhythmias, overdose, and death. Individuals with chronic pain experience high rates of comorbid chronic insomnia, arousal, and abnormal brain activation in response to painful stimuli. Research shows individuals with chronic pain exhibit increased brain activation in regions associated with pain modulation in response to painful stimuli compared to healthy controls. Withdrawal from opioids is difficult; and inadequately managed pain contributes to that difficulty. The Cognitive Activation Theory of Stress (CATS) tests the hypothesis that poor sleep and arousal lead to critical changes in brain activation that increase pain severity and lead to opioid use. Research shows cognitive behavioral treatment for insomnia (CBT-I, an evidence based intervention for chronic insomnia) improves sleep, arousal, abnormal brain activation, and pain in individuals with comorbid chronic pain and insomnia, but does not reduce opioid use. However, because CBT-I improves each of the mediators hypothesized to contribute to opioid use, it warrants examination as a neoadjuvant to gradual tapering of opioid medication. The proposed trial tests the novel hypothesis that improving sleep and decreasing arousal will lead to normalized brain activation and decreased pain prior to gradual tapering, which will facilitate reduced opioid use. This hypothesis is supported by theory (CATS) and empirical findings. It also reflects federal pain research priorities.

Notice

Study information shown on this site is derived from ClinicalTrials.gov (a public registry operated by the National Institutes of Health). The listing of studies provided is not certain to be all studies for which you might be eligible. Furthermore, study eligibility requirements can be difficult to understand and may change over time, so it is wise to speak with your medical care provider and individual research study teams when making decisions related to participation.