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Clinical Trials/NCT04493229
NCT04493229
Withdrawn
Phase 2

A Pilot Feasibility Study of Intramuscular Oxytocin on Fear of Pain and Trust in Physical Therapist During Outpatient Rehabilitation After Total Knee Arthroplasty

Wake Forest University Health Sciences1 site in 1 countryJanuary 2024

Overview

Phase
Phase 2
Intervention
Oxytocin
Conditions
Osteoarthritis, Knee
Sponsor
Wake Forest University Health Sciences
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia-11 (TSK-11)
Status
Withdrawn
Last Updated
4 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

This study will examine the effect that a dose of intramuscular (IM) oxytocin (naturally occurring hormone) has on fear of pain and movement and trust in the physical therapist during outpatient rehabilitation after total knee replacement has been performed. Investigators will ask participants to answer questions about fear of pain and movement before several outpatient physical therapy session and investigators will ask participants questions about trust of the physical therapist several times after the outpatient physical therapy sessions.

Detailed Description

The purpose of this study is to determine feasibility of this study design and identify barriers that altered design could bring to overcome these barriers in the design of a large, pragmatic, multi-center clinical trial. It is also designed to estimate the effect size and variance of the main outcome measures, trust and fear, in patients undergoing rehabilitation after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). The study team hypothesizes that intramuscular (IM) oxytocin, in a dose and time determined by a series of previous studies under this grant to target the brain, will enhance trust and reduce fear and that these will be associated with improved outcomes. Again, the study is not designed to test this hypothesis, but to gather the critical data necessary to test it in a large, multi-center clinical trial that would follow this grant. Participants that have decided to undergo unilateral TKA, will come to the Pain Clinical Research Unit at least 48 hours prior to surgery to confirm consent and complete a series of questionnaires. Participants surgery, anesthesia, and postoperative medication and therapy treatment will be routine. On the first outpatient study visit participants will complete a questionnaire of fear about pain and receive an intramuscular injection of oxytocin or placebo in a randomized, double blind manner. At the end of this session participants will complete a questionnaire assessing the degree of trust in the therapist. Physical therapy be will routine, and the fear and trust questionnaires will be completed at the 2nd, 4th, 8th, and last physical therapy session as well as routine measures of progress and function. The primary outcome measure is assessment of effect size and variability of the trust and fear questionnaires on the 1st and 2nd visit.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
January 2024
End Date
January 2026
Last Updated
4 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Male or female \> 18 and \< 75 years of age, Body Mass Index (BMI) \<
  • Generally in good health as determined by the Principal Investigator based on prior medical history, American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status 1, 2, or
  • Scheduled for unilateral TKA and postoperative physical therapy at Davie Medical Center.
  • Normal blood pressure (systolic 90-140 mmHg; diastolic 50-90 mmHg) resting heart rate 45-100 beats per minute) without medication or for those with hypertension, pressure controlled with anti-hypertensives and with a resting heart rate 45-100 beats per minute.
  • Female subjects of child-bearing potential and those \< 1 year post-menopausal, must be practicing highly effective methods of birth control such as hormonal methods (e.g., combined oral, implantable, injectable, or transdermal contraceptives), double barrier methods (e.g., condoms, sponge, diaphragm, or vaginal ring plus spermicidal jellies or cream), or total abstinence from heterosexual intercourse for a minimum of 1 full cycle before study drug administration.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Hypersensitivity, allergy, or significant reaction to any ingredient of Pitocin®
  • Any disease, diagnosis, or condition (medical or surgical) that, in the opinion of the Principal Investigator, would place the subject at increased risk (active gynecologic disease in which increased tone would be detrimental e.g., uterine fibroids with ongoing bleeding), compromise the subject's compliance with study procedures, or compromise the quality of the data
  • Women who are pregnant (positive result for urine pregnancy test at screening visit), women who are currently nursing or lactating, women that have been pregnant within 2 years
  • Subjects with neuropathy, chronic pain, diabetes mellitus, or taking benzodiazepines or pain medications on a daily basis.

Arms & Interventions

Oxytocin

Oxytocin IM injection will be given per randomization prior to first outpatient physical therapy session

Intervention: Oxytocin

Placebo

Placebo IM injection will be given per randomization prior to first outpatient physical therapy session

Intervention: Placebo

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia-11 (TSK-11)

Time Frame: Postoperative Outpatient Physical Therapy Final Visit, 10-60 days after study medication

TSK-11 scale ranges from 11 to 44 with a higher score denoting a worse outcome. The TSK-11 will be completed prior to the outpatient post-operative physical therapy session

Working Alliance Inventory (WAI)

Time Frame: Postoperative Outpatient Physical Therapy Final Visit, 10-60 days after study medication

The WAI score ranges from 24 to 72 with a higher score denoting a better outcome. The WAI will be completed after the outpatient post-operative physical therapy session.

Secondary Outcomes

  • Pain during straight leg raise(Post-operative outpatient physical therapy sessions, up to 12 weeks post surgery)
  • Pain after straight leg raise(Post-operative outpatient physical therapy sessions, up to 12 weeks post surgery)
  • Physical therapist deems stepping exercise begins; may walk up and down steps(Post-operative 24-48 hours after surgery)
  • Gait speed(Post-operative outpatient physical therapy sessions, up to 12 weeks post surgery)
  • Average pain score(Post-operative outpatient physical therapy sessions, up to 12 weeks post surgery)
  • Analgesic Consumption(Post-operative outpatient physical therapy sessions, up to 12 weeks post surgery)

Study Sites (1)

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