- Palermo, Tonya M;
- Murray, Caitlin;
- Aalfs, Homer;
- Abu-El-Haija, Maisam;
- Barth, Bradley;
- Bellin, Melena D;
- Ellery, Kate;
- Fishman, Douglas S;
- Gariepy, Cheryl E;
- Giefer, Matthew J;
- Goday, Praveen;
- Gonska, Tanja;
- Heyman, Melvin B;
- Husain, Sohail Z;
- Lin, Tom K;
- Liu, Quin Y;
- Mascarenhas, Maria R;
- Maqbool, Asim;
- McFerron, Brian;
- Morinville, Veronique D;
- Nathan, Jaimie D;
- Ooi, Chee Y;
- Perito, Emily R;
- Pohl, John F;
- Schwarzenberg, Sarah Jane;
- Sellers, Zachary M;
- Serrano, Jose;
- Shah, Uzma;
- Troendle, David;
- Zheng, Yuhua;
- Yuan, Ying;
- Lowe, Mark;
- Uc, Aliye;
- Pancreatitis, Diabetes and Pancreatic Cancer on behalf of the Consortium for the Study of Chronic
Introduction
Abdominal pain is common and is associated with high disease burden and health care costs in pediatric acute recurrent and chronic pancreatitis (ARP/CP). Despite the strong central component of pain in ARP/CP and the efficacy of psychological therapies for other centralized pain syndromes, no studies have evaluated psychological pain interventions in children with ARP/CP. The current trial seeks to 1) evaluate the efficacy of a psychological pain intervention for pediatric ARP/CP, and 2) examine baseline patient-specific genetic, clinical, and psychosocial characteristics that may predict or moderate treatment response.Methods
This single-blinded randomized placebo-controlled multicenter trial aims to enroll 260 youth (ages 10-18) with ARP/CP and their parents from twenty-one INSPPIRE (INternational Study Group of Pediatric Pancreatitis: In search for a cuRE) centers. Participants will be randomly assigned to either a web-based cognitive behavioral pain management intervention (Web-based Management of Adolescent Pain Chronic Pancreatitis; WebMAP; N = 130) or to a web-based pain education program (WebED; N = 130). Assessments will be completed at baseline (T1), immediately after completion of the intervention (T2) and at 6 months post-intervention (T3). The primary study outcome is abdominal pain severity. Secondary outcomes include pain-related disability, pain interference, health-related quality of life, emotional distress, impact of pain, opioid use, and healthcare utilization.Conclusions
This is the first clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy of a psychological pain intervention for children with CP for reduction of abdominal pain and improvement of health-related quality of life. Findings will inform delivery of web-based pain management and potentially identify patient-specific biological and psychosocial factors associated with favorable response to therapy. Clinical Trial Registration #: NCT03707431.