Flares of Low Back Pain With Activity Research Study
- Conditions
- Low Back Pain
- Registration Number
- NCT04828330
- Lead Sponsor
- VA Office of Research and Development
- Brief Summary
Low back pain (LBP) is the most common cause of disability worldwide. Although general activity is encouraged in the treatment of LBP, there is limited empirical information available on the specific types of activities that are beneficial or harmful for patients seen in primary care for LBP. This study will identify those physical activities with short-term (transient) effects on LBP exacerbations (or "flares" of LBP), as well as identifying the long-term (cumulative) effects of such activities on functional recovery.
- Detailed Description
This research will use a novel approach to distinguish the short-term effects on LBP of physical activities from the long-term effects of such activities, by conducting a longitudinal case-crossover study nested within a cohort study. This design accounts for measured and unmeasured confounds by using each case as his/her own control- an entirely observational study that is analogous to a crossover experiment- capitalizing on modern mobile health and actigraphy technology. The primary exposures of interest are 10 self-reported physical activities commonly performed during work and activities of daily living, and actigraphy-assessed physical activity. Other exposures of interest include psychological factors, social factors, lifestyle-related factors, and work-related factors. The primary outcomes are participant-reported "flares" of low back pain (Aim 1) and participant-reported back-related functional limitations (mobility and activities of daily living \[ADLs\]) at 1-year follow-up, as measured by the Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire. This observational study will include up to 550 Veterans with LBP aged 18 and older recruited from the VA Puget Sound Health Care System (VAPSHCS). The study will not affect participants' medical care in any way. After informed consent, recruitment, and baseline data collection, study participants will complete frequent, serial electronic "e-Questionnaires" using their own personal electronic devices (personal computer \[PC\], tablet, or smartphone) over the 1-year period of follow-up. Participants may also wear ActiGraph units for the 1st 4 weeks of follow-up. Long-term outcomes will be assessed by extended e-Questionnaires completed at 1-year follow-up. Aim 1 analyses will examine the short-term effects of 10 specific activity categories on participant-reported flares across all study assessments over 1-year follow-up. Aim 2 analyses will examine associations between the frequency of exposure to 10 specific activity categories over weeks 1-4 of follow-up, and long-term functional recovery at 12 months as defined by the RMDQ. All analyses will use a biopsychosocial framework accounting for potential confounders (sociodemographics, psychological factors, etc.) and effect modifiers, and will include sensitivity analyses to examine the robustness of findings and important study assumptions. This study was registered prior to the start of enrollment.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 474
- Veterans age 18-65 years seen in VA primary care for LBP
- Must have regular access (every day, during most hours of the day) to a computer, tablet, or smartphone with internet access at home or at work
- Basic computer literacy
- Having a mobile phone capable of receiving alerts using text messages
- Must be able to understand and read English, sufficient to provide informed consent and validly complete the study assessments.
- Participants must complete basic requirements during a 2-week run-in period, such as completing e-Questionnaires
After approval by the study sponsor and IRB, an additional inclusion criterion was added beginning on 3/10/2023, to also allow the inclusion of other patients with low back pain. The inclusion criteria were broadened to include other patients seen for low back pain in the health care system, including three "specific" subgroups of Veterans with low back pain: (1) Veterans with lumbosacral facet-mediated low back pain; (2) Veterans with sacroiliac joint-mediated low back pain; and (3) Veterans with spondylolytic spondylolistheses.
- Red flag' spine conditions (spinal cord injury, infection, malignancy, fracture) or spondyloarthropathy
- Pregnancy
- Prisoners or incarcerated
- Severe active medical or psychiatric comorbidities likely to be a barrier to study participation including completing frequent, serial assessments (e.g., metastatic cancer).
- Thoracolumbar spine surgery in the past 1 year
- Other major orthopedic surgery potentially impeding normal physical activities (such as surgeries involving the hip, knee, ankle, shoulder, elbow, wrist joints) within the past 6 months, or major abdominal or chest surgery within the past 6 months.*
- Planned major orthopedic, abdominal, or chest surgery in the next 2 months.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Participant-reported "flares" of low back pain (Aim 1) Flares over 1-year follow-up At each study assessment, participants are presented with the flare definition used in this study, which was derived from a previously validated flare definition by Costa et al (2000). The definition is: "A 'flare' of low back pain is a worsening of your low back pain that lasts from hours to weeks".
Participants are then asked to self-report whether a flare of low back pain is currently ongoing, by responding to the question "According to the definition above, are you currently experiencing a flare of your low back pain?", with response options of "yes" or "no". These response options define participant-reported flares.Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire (Aim 2) 1-year follow-up Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire (Aim 2)
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
VA Puget Sound Health Care System Seattle Division, Seattle, WA
🇺🇸Seattle, Washington, United States