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Osteopathic Single CAse Research for Patients With Chronic Low Back Pain

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Chronic Low-back Pain
Interventions
Other: Osteopathic Manual Treatment
Other: Self-management
Other: Reassurance
Other: Biopsychosocial management
Registration Number
NCT05120921
Lead Sponsor
University College of Osteopathy
Brief Summary

This study aims to collect primary data from patients with low back pain to assess the effect of standard osteopathic management and biopsychosocially-informed osteopathic care using a Single-Case Experimental Design.

Detailed Description

After being informed about the study and potential risks, all osteopaths and patient participants giving written consent will be screened for eligibility. When entering the trial, patients will be randomised to early, intermediate or late intervention with either standard osteopathic management or biopsychosocially-informed osteopathic management.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
9
Inclusion Criteria
  • 18 or more years old
  • agree to take part in the study and provide formal online consent after having been assessed as capable of providing informed consent by the osteopath
  • Being fluent enough in English to be able to understand content of consent forms (and participate in osteopathic treatment without an interpreter)
  • Presenting with non-specific low back pain of a duration of a minimum of 12 weeks)
  • NRS score between 5 and 9 on a 11-point scale
  • PSFS score between 2 and 7 at baseline
  • Who can be contacted by email
  • Available for an appointment within two days around the randomisation date
Exclusion Criteria
  • Under 18
  • Lacking capacity to give consent
  • Presenting with low back pain with a known or suspected pathological cause (e.g. infection, cancer or fracture)
  • People for whom osteopathic treatment may be contra-indicated (as assessed by the osteopath in the initial consultation) or who disclose information during their course of treatment which requires referral for other medical investigations or care
  • LBP of less than 12 weeks
  • NRS score below 5 or above 9
  • PSFS score above below 2 or above 7
  • Patients providing less than 3 data points during baseline

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
biopsychosocially informed osteopathic manual treatmentSelf-managementAs for the active comparator + biopsychosocial management: after having a completed a 8-10 hour e-learning on the biopsychosocial model for the management of low back pain, osteopaths will use the same approaches as in the active comparator group, plus techniques to help patients making sense of their symptoms, to develop patients' self-efficacy, and psychosocial management skills.
standard osteopathic manual treatmentReassurancePragmatic individualised osteopathic manual treatment which is a system of diagnosis and treatment for a wide range of musculoskeletal conditions. Osteopaths take a detailed case history and perform a thorough clinical examination to help understand the nature of patients' pain and symptoms so that they can arrive at a diagnosis. Practitioners use touch, physical manipulation, stretching and massage to help increase the mobility of joints, to relieve muscle/joint tension and pain. Osteopaths often combine a range of other treatment techniques in their approach, such as rehabilitative exercises, advice about how patients can self-manage their condition and educational approaches to help them understand their pain. Osteopathy is a regulated profession (regulated by the General Osteopathic Council) in the UK
biopsychosocially informed osteopathic manual treatmentBiopsychosocial managementAs for the active comparator + biopsychosocial management: after having a completed a 8-10 hour e-learning on the biopsychosocial model for the management of low back pain, osteopaths will use the same approaches as in the active comparator group, plus techniques to help patients making sense of their symptoms, to develop patients' self-efficacy, and psychosocial management skills.
biopsychosocially informed osteopathic manual treatmentReassuranceAs for the active comparator + biopsychosocial management: after having a completed a 8-10 hour e-learning on the biopsychosocial model for the management of low back pain, osteopaths will use the same approaches as in the active comparator group, plus techniques to help patients making sense of their symptoms, to develop patients' self-efficacy, and psychosocial management skills.
standard osteopathic manual treatmentOsteopathic Manual TreatmentPragmatic individualised osteopathic manual treatment which is a system of diagnosis and treatment for a wide range of musculoskeletal conditions. Osteopaths take a detailed case history and perform a thorough clinical examination to help understand the nature of patients' pain and symptoms so that they can arrive at a diagnosis. Practitioners use touch, physical manipulation, stretching and massage to help increase the mobility of joints, to relieve muscle/joint tension and pain. Osteopaths often combine a range of other treatment techniques in their approach, such as rehabilitative exercises, advice about how patients can self-manage their condition and educational approaches to help them understand their pain. Osteopathy is a regulated profession (regulated by the General Osteopathic Council) in the UK
biopsychosocially informed osteopathic manual treatmentOsteopathic Manual TreatmentAs for the active comparator + biopsychosocial management: after having a completed a 8-10 hour e-learning on the biopsychosocial model for the management of low back pain, osteopaths will use the same approaches as in the active comparator group, plus techniques to help patients making sense of their symptoms, to develop patients' self-efficacy, and psychosocial management skills.
standard osteopathic manual treatmentSelf-managementPragmatic individualised osteopathic manual treatment which is a system of diagnosis and treatment for a wide range of musculoskeletal conditions. Osteopaths take a detailed case history and perform a thorough clinical examination to help understand the nature of patients' pain and symptoms so that they can arrive at a diagnosis. Practitioners use touch, physical manipulation, stretching and massage to help increase the mobility of joints, to relieve muscle/joint tension and pain. Osteopaths often combine a range of other treatment techniques in their approach, such as rehabilitative exercises, advice about how patients can self-manage their condition and educational approaches to help them understand their pain. Osteopathy is a regulated profession (regulated by the General Osteopathic Council) in the UK
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
The Patient Specific Functional Scale changes during the treatment phase (max 6 weeks) and follow-up period (12 weeks)Up to 18 weeks

PSFS measures functional change in patients with musculoskeletal disorders. Patients choose to list up to 5 activities that they have difficulty with or are unable to perform. They will be asked to continue recording data for the originally chosen activities but can add extra activities if goals change (e.g. due to improving or worsening symptoms). Patients will rate current level of difficulty for each activity on an 11-point scale, where 0 = unable to perform and 10 = able to perform at previous level. Mean averages are calculated by summing the difficulty ratings and dividing by the number of activities. The PSFS is reliable and responsive for patients with chronic low back pain and a Minimum Detectable Change (MDC) is considered to be 3 points for 1 activity or 2 points for the average of 2 or more activities.

Numeric Pain Rating Scale changes during the treatment phase (max 6 weeks) and follow-up period (12 weeks)Up to 18 weeks

11-item unidimensional measure of pain intensity. The Initiative on Methods, Measurement, and Pain Assessment in Clinical Trials recommendations will be used, i.e. patients will be presented with the numbers from 0 to 10, with 0 meaning 'No pain' and '10' meaning 'Pain as bad as you can imagine,' accompanied by the instructions "Please rate your pain by indicating the number that best describes your pain on average in the last 24h". NPRS is an acceptable measure but should not be used on its own as patients with chronic pain find it does not capture the complexity of their pain experience. It has a high test-retest reliability and a good validity. Patients will be asked to complete the NPRS every day, taking approx. 1 min.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
The Pain Attitudes and Beliefs Scale (for the osteopaths)6 months

PABS is a 19-item questionnaire with six-point response scales. The questionnaire aims to assess two treatment orientations towards LBP: 'biomedical', where disability and pain are consequences of specific tissue pathology and treatment aims to treat pathology; and 'behavioural', where practitioners believe in a BPS model of disease, in which pain does not have to be a sign of tissue damage and can be influenced by social and psychological factors. There is evidence for content and construct validity, internal consistency, reliability and responsiveness. The modified version of the PABS will be used in this project (Cronbach's α Biomedical domain 0.84; Cronbach's α behavioural domain is 0.68).

Measure Your Medical Outcome Profile 2Up to 18 weeks

MYMOP2 is a self-report questionnaire that lists one or two symptoms and one activity affected by the patient's condition. The first activity the patient participant created in PSFS will automatically be entered into the text of MYMOP2. The follow-up questionnaire is shorter but allows addition of a third symptom. MYMOP2 is a validated, sensitive and responsive outcome measure. A minimum clinically important change (MCIC) in score should be between 0.5-1.0, and any change greater than 1.0 is considered clinically significant. Patients will be asked to complete MYMOP2 once a week, taking approx. 5 min.

The Depression, Anxiety, and Positive Outlook ScaleUp to 18 weeks

DAPOS is a self-administered questionnaire that measures distress and positive affect in chronic musculoskeletal pain populations. It has 11 items: 5 on depression, 3 on positive affect and 3 on anxiety; all answered with a 5-point Likert scale response (ranging from 'almost never' to 'almost all the time'). It has an excellent internal consistency and construct validity in comparison with a variety of measures (SF-36; Pain Catastrophizing Scale; Zung Depression) and an acceptable responsiveness.

The Arthritis Research UK Musculoskeletal Health QuestionnaireUp to 18 weeks

MSK-HQ captures generalised health outcomes that are relevant to patients with a range of musculoskeletal conditions. It achieves high completion rates, excellent test-retest reliability, and has strong convergent validity with reference standards. It includes 14 questions scored on a 0-4 scale (range 0-56, where a higher total score represents better health). A licence has been requested to use the questionnaire online from Oxford University Innovation centre for free. Patients will be asked to complete the MSK-HQ three times, taking approx. 2 minutes.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University College of Osteopathy

🇬🇧

London, United Kingdom

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