MedPath

Stanford Spine Keeper - Managing Your Low Back Pain

Not Applicable
Not yet recruiting
Conditions
Chronic Low Back Pain
Interventions
Other: Mobile health applications (mHealth apps) based intervention
Registration Number
NCT05443503
Lead Sponsor
Stanford University
Brief Summary

Mobile health applications (mHealth apps) are transforming medical research and intervention by allowing constant, instantaneous and personalized access to patients. The investigators have designed a mHealth app (Stanford SpineKeeper) utilizing the Apple ResearchKit and HealthKit platform, which is an open source software framework designed Apple Inc to be used by medical researchers to use for research purposes. The investigators will assess whether a multidisciplinary intervention delivered through the application can help improve quality of life and minimize symptoms in patients with chronic low back pain.

Detailed Description

The purpose of this study is to assess whether a mHealth app based intervention can improve symptoms and quality of life in human subjects. Access to human subjects is critical to the success of this project.

Recruitment:

Participants will be recruited via the Apple ResearchKit platform. Interested participants who answers "yes" to the questions "Are you having low back pain?" and "Have your back pain been an ongoing problem for 6 months or longer?" are eligible to download the mobile phone application and participate. Patients will provide electronic informed consent via the mobile application . A phone number will be provided for potential participants to call to speak to a live representative.

Materials

App Design:

The investigators designed the mobile phone application to be compatible with the Apple Inc (iPhone operating system \[iOS\] 8 or 9) platform - ResearchKit. Our app was based on codes from another Stanford approved ResearchKit study - MyHeart Counts. The ResearchKit platform is set up to help researchers design applications capable of performing HIPAA compliant informed consent, surveys, active tasks, account creation, and passcode pin entry. As in the original MyHeart Counts app, the smartphone consent process used here have been adapted from an opensource toolkit developed by Sage Bionetworks in collaboration with the Electronic Data Methods forum of the AHRQ (Agency for Healthcare Research \& Quality). The consent process have previously been reviewed with faculty in the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics.

Intervention:

Patients can choose among or choose to be assigned to 2 tracks for management for their low back pain. The tracks include one focused on relaxation and symptom management, and another track on increasing activity. Each include educational material adapted from various sources from North America Spine Society (NASS), Center for Disease Control (CDC), National Institue of Health (NIH).

Patients will stay in track for 28 days. After this, they may choose to remain in track and continue to perform maintenance activities or to engage in a different track.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
500000
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Self-reported "yes" to the question "Have you ever had low back pain for 6 months?"
  2. Ownership of an iPhone with an updated operating system (iOS 8 or 9) compatible with Apple ResearchKit with internet connectivity.
  3. Self-reported aged 18 years and older with medical-decision making capacity.
  4. Literacy in the English language
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Exclusion Criteria
  1. Any serious chronic medical issues (severe cardiac or pulmonary medical problems, cancer) that may limit ability to participate in physical therapy and home exercise.
  2. Individuals who are pregnant, incarcerated, decisionally impaired.
Read More

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
InterventionMobile health applications (mHealth apps) based interventionPatients can choose among or choose to be assigned to 2 tracks for management for their low back pain. The tracks include one focused on relaxation and symptom management, and another track on increasing activity. Each include educational material adapted from various sources from North America Spine Society (NASS), Center for Disease Control (CDC), National Institue of Health (NIH). Patients will stay in track for 28 days. After this, they may choose to remain in track and continue to perform maintenance activities or to engage in a different track.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Free-living physical activity logRecorded daily for 7 days starting at enrollment and after the completion of each 28-day cycle

Log of free-living (outside of the laboratory) physical activity recorded using the Stanford Spine Keeper app, which utilizes the Recommended Minimum Dataset from NIH Task Force on Research Standards for Chronic Low Back.

Change in reported functional marker profileRecorded daily for 7 days starting at enrollment and after the completion of each 28-day cycle

Qualitative assessment of back pain and quality of life using the Stanford Spine Keeper app, which utilizes the Recommended Minimum Dataset from NIH Task Force on Research Standards for Chronic Low Back.

Change in pain scoreRecorded daily for 7 days starting at enrollment and after the completion of each 28-day cycle

Patient-report pain rated on a 0-10 scale (0 = no pain, 10 = worst pain) using the Stanford Spine Keeper app, which utilizes the Recommended Minimum Dataset from NIH Task Force on Research Standards for Chronic Low Back.

Change in daily stepsRecorded daily for 7 days starting at enrollment and after the completion of each 28-day cycle

Change in daily steps recorded using the Stanford Spine Keeper app, which utilizes the Recommended Minimum Dataset from NIH Task Force on Research Standards for Chronic Low Back.

Change in back range of motionRecorded daily for 7 days starting at enrollment and after the completion of each 28-day cycle

Change in back range of motion recorded using the Stanford Spine Keeper app, which utilizes the Recommended Minimum Dataset from NIH Task Force on Research Standards for Chronic Low Back.

Change in six-minute walk testRecorded daily for 7 days starting at enrollment and after the completion of each 28-day cycle

Change in six-minute walk test recorded using the Stanford Spine Keeper app, which utilizes the Recommended Minimum Dataset from NIH Task Force on Research Standards for Chronic Low Back.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Stanford University

🇺🇸

Redwood City, California, United States

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