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Thalamic-Burst-DBS for Neuropathic Pain

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Central Post-stroke Pain
Neuropathic Pain
Interventions
Device: Burst DBS
Device: Tonic DBS
Registration Number
NCT05204472
Lead Sponsor
Insel Gruppe AG, University Hospital Bern
Brief Summary

Central post-stroke pain (CPSP) is a neuropathic pain syndrome and one of the major sequelae after ischemic or hemorrhagic cerebral stroke.

Recently, a modified stimulation paradigm has been developed in the field of spinal cord stimulation (SCS) for a variety of neuropathic pain disorders. To date, this stimulation paradigm has not yet been evaluated systematically for deep brain stimulation to treat neuropathic pain disorders.

The purpose of this clinical investigation is to investigate if Burst-DBS of the thalamus is more effective compared to classical continuous low-frequency stimulation DBS to reduce the subjective pain intensity in patients with chronic neuropathic pain after stroke or in patients with neuropathic facial pain.

Detailed Description

Central post-stroke pain (CPSP) is a neuropathic pain syndrome and one of the major sequelae after ischemic or hemorrhagic cerebral stroke. Neuropathic facial pain (NFP) can arise after damage to or affection of the trigeminal nerve caused by trauma, infection or postsurgery and results in characteristic burning and shooting pain of the affected area in the face.

The lack of effective analgesic treatment for these two conditions continues to be an unmet medical need and led to the investigation of alternative treatments of CPSP and NFP such as deep brain stimulation (DBS). DBS is an invasive neuromodulation therapy that consists of placing small electrodes into confined anatomical structures of the brain to deliver small therapeutic currents.

Recently, a modified stimulation paradigm has been developed in the field of spinal cord stimulation (SCS) for a variety of neuropathic pain disorders. This so-called burst stimulation provides pulse trains of five high-frequency pulses at 500 Hz (= 500 Hz spike frequency) occurring 40 times a second (= 40 Hz burst frequency). Burst SCS has been demonstrated to provide a better pain relief compared to classical tonic (continuous application of 50 Hz stimulation) SCS without causing paresthesia. To date, this stimulation paradigm has not yet been evaluated systematically for deep brain stimulation to treat neuropathic pain disorders.

The purpose of this clinical investigation is to investigate if Burst-DBS of the thalamus is more effective compared to classical continuous low-frequency stimulation DBS to reduce the subjective pain intensity in patients with chronic neuropathic pain after stroke or in patients with neuropathic facial pain.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
20
Inclusion Criteria
  • Signed informed consent

  • Age 18-75 years

  • Patients suffering from chronic (duration > 12 months) unilateral neuropathic pain caused by an ischemic or haemorrhagic cerebral stroke or

  • Patients suffering from chronic (duration > 12 months) unilateral neuropathic facial pain due to one of the following causes:

    1. post-herpes-zoster-neuralgia,
    2. posttraumatic, neuropathic facial pain,
    3. atypical trigeminal neuralgia after surgical intervention
  • Severe baseline pain intensity (VAS score > 6/10) considered as resistant to medication specific to neuropathic pain at sufficient doses and durations (including at least antiepileptics and antidepressants)

Exclusion Criteria
  • Significant cognitive impairment (total MOCA score < 1.5 standard deviations from age- and education adapted mean values),
  • DSMIV axis I or II psychiatric disorder
  • Relevant psychosocial risk factors (any of): history of other chronic pain syndrome, pain catastrophizing, substance abuse, secondary gain
  • Contra-indication to surgery, anesthesia, or MRI
  • Known or suspected non-compliance or inability to operate the DBS system
  • Woman with childbearing potential
  • Inability to follow the procedures of the study, e.g. due to language problems, psychological disorders, dementia. etc. of the subject
  • Participation in another interventional clinical trial within 30 days prior to this trial or during the trial
  • Previous enrollment into the current trial
  • Enrolment of the investigator's family members, employees, and other dependent persons
  • Patients who are planned to undergo diathermy, electroshock therapy or transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS)
  • Patients with implanted electric devices (i.e. cardiac defibrillator, pacemaker)
  • Patients who are at poor surgical risk (i.e. patients with multiple severe illnesses or active general infections)

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
CROSSOVER
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Burst DBS first, Tonic DBS secondBurst DBS10 days of Burst-stimulation followed by 10 days of active tonic stimulation (Burst-DBS -\> tonic-DBS)
Tonic DBS first, Burst DBS secondBurst DBS10 days of active tonic stimulation followed by 10 days of Burst-stimulation (tonic-DBS -\> Burst-DBS)
Tonic DBS first, Burst DBS secondTonic DBS10 days of active tonic stimulation followed by 10 days of Burst-stimulation (tonic-DBS -\> Burst-DBS)
Burst DBS first, Tonic DBS secondTonic DBS10 days of Burst-stimulation followed by 10 days of active tonic stimulation (Burst-DBS -\> tonic-DBS)
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Percentage reduction of pain intensity2 weeks after surgery

Percentage reduction of pain intensity on the numeric rating scale (NRS 1-10) after each stimulation-block compared to the baseline pain intensity before surgery. Score 0-10 with 0 representing no pain, and 10 maximum pain intensity

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change of dosage of analgesic medication(s)12 months after surgery

Change of dosage of analgesic medication(s) at 12 months of open-label stimulation measured as the total dosage in mg per medication per day with reference to baseline

Efficacy of DBS12 months after surgery

Efficacy of DBS after 12 months of open-label stimulation measured as the percentage improvement of depressive symptoms by the BDI questionnaire compared to baseline

Change of pain intensity on the numeric rating scale12 months after surgery

Efficacy of DBS after 12 months of open-label stimulation measured as the percentage change of pain intensity on the numeric rating scale compared to baseline. Score 0-10 with 0 representing no pain, and 10 maximum pain intensity

Percentage change of pain intensity on the Neuropathy pain scale12 months after surgery

Efficacy of DBS after 12 months of open-label measured as the percentage change of pain intensity on the Neuropathy pain scale (DN-4) compared to baseline. Score 0-10 with 0 representing no pain, and 100 maximum pain intensity

Percentage improvement of quality of life measured by the EuroQoL 5D-5L12 months after surgery

Efficacy of DBS after 12 months of open-label measured as the percentage improvement of quality of life measured by the EuroQoL 5D-5L questionnaire (Mobility, Self-Care, Usual Activities, Pain/Discomfort, Anxiety/ Depression (rating from no problems to extreme problems) and health status self rating by patient (Score 0-100, 0 the worst health and 100 the best health)) compared to baseline.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Dep. of Neurosurgery, Bern University Hospital

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Bern, Switzerland

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