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临床试验/NCT05935761
NCT05935761
尚未招募
2 期

Investigating Novel Interventions for Low Back Pain in US Military Veterans: A Randomized Controlled Adaptive Phase II Trial

VA Office of Research and Development2 个研究点 分布在 1 个国家目标入组 108 人2026年6月1日

概览

阶段
2 期
干预措施
Pregnenolone
疾病 / 适应症
Chronic Low Back Pain
发起方
VA Office of Research and Development
入组人数
108
试验地点
2
主要终点
Pain Numerical Rating Scale (0-10) Change
状态
尚未招募
最后更新
11天前

概览

简要总结

Chronic pain symptoms are very common among U.S. Military Veterans and have a profound negative impact on mental health symptoms and quality of life, in addition to increasing risk for suicidal ideation and suicidal behaviors. There are currently extremely few safe and effective pharmacological treatments for chronic pain disorders, and the clinical need to develop new therapeutics for pain has never been more urgent. Fueled by the worsening opioid crisis and further exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, opioid and other drug overdose deaths have climbed to staggeringly high levels. The rapid development of medications for the management of chronic pain conditions that are safe, well-tolerated, efficacious and non-addicting is thus of paramount importance. The two neurosteroid candidates to be investigated in this trial are naturally occurring molecules enriched in human brain and potentially ideal candidates for safe and effective chronic pain treatment.

详细描述

Pain is one of the most common reasons that Americans seek medical care, with more than 50 million Americans reporting pain that is chronic (CDC NHIS data) and almost 20 million Americans reporting high impact pain that affects major life activities (Nahin, 2015). Chronic pain conditions disproportionately impact U.S. Military Veterans, and back pain is one of the most common diagnoses among Iraq/Afghanistan-era Veterans. The often-debilitating sequelae of chronic low back pain profoundly impacts quality of life and function in a very large number of Veterans and is substantial risk factor for the development or worsening of depression, anxiety and suicidal ideation. Commonly used treatments for pain include long-term opioid use, which is frequently suboptimal and has played a substantial role in the recent surge of opioid-related addiction and deaths. Non-opioid pharmacological interventions that maximize analgesia and minimize adverse outcomes are thus of critical national importance. Neurosteroids exhibit pleiotropic actions that are highly relevant to central nervous system conditions, including pain disorders. Both preclinical and clinical studies provide strong evidence for the role of neurosteroids in pain. Among other similar studies, the investigators' laboratory has also demonstrated that allopregnanolone levels are reduced in Veterans reporting low back pain and chest pain. Moreover, the recently completed randomized clinical trial (RCT) demonstrated that Veterans randomized to pregnenolone (an endogenous precursor of allopregnanolone) demonstrated significant reduction in low back pain compared to placebo (Naylor et al 2020). The highest dose of pregnenolone resulted in the greatest improvements in pain intensity ratings but the investigators' data suggested that higher doses of this molecule may be even more efficacious. Thus, an RCT to optimize dosing of pregnenolone is warranted. Furthermore, dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) is another neurosteroid that has been implicated in pain. The investigators' laboratory (and others) demonstrates that DHEA levels are generally inversely associated with pain and the preliminary data indicate that supplementation with DHEA is associated with a reduction in pain symptoms. Administration of DHEA could thus also represent a novel therapeutic intervention for chronic pain symptoms. The investigators therefore propose to utilize an efficient and informative adaptive trial design to evaluate the efficacy and safety of these two promising molecules for the treatment of chronic low back pain. Specific Aim 1: To conduct a Phase II adaptive randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial with flexible dosing of pregnenolone, DHEA or placebo (1:1:1 randomization) to highest well-tolerated doses in 108 Veterans with chronic low back pain who served in the U.S. Military. Safety and efficacy will be determined for each chronic low back pain intervention over the course of 4 weeks (total study duration is 6 weeks). Hypothesis 1: Based on the investigators' previously published RCT showing that 500 mg of pregnenolone significantly reduces low back pain, it's hypothesize the investigators will replicate these positive findings with the pregnenolone 500 mg dosing strategy and that pregnenolone at higher doses of 1,000 mg and 2,000 mg per day will result in even greater improvements in low back pain Hypothesis 2: DHEA levels at baseline and post-treatment will predict therapeutic response and higher doses will result in greater improvement in low back pain. Hypothesis 3: Pregnenolone and DHEA will be safe and well-tolerated in this adaptive clinical trial design using flexible dosing. Specific Aim 2: To conduct biomarker candidate investigations quantifying pregnenolone, DHEA and their neurosteroid metabolite levels (allopregnanolone, others) in serum at baseline, during treatment and post-treatment with pregnenolone and DHEA using highly sensitive and specific mass spectrometry-based methodologies (GC/MS/MS) in order to: a.) characterize the metabolic profile and pharmacokinetics of pregnenolone and DHEA and b.) identify predictors of therapeutic response (potentially yielding valuable dosing information and identifying windows of optimal therapeutic efficacy). Hypothesis: Based on the preliminary candidate biomarker data, the investigators hypothesize that changes in pregnenolone, pregnenolone metabolites, DHEA and DHEA metabolite levels post-treatment will be predictive of therapeutic response and identify optimal therapeutic ranges. As chronic low back pain conditions significantly impact Veterans, there is an urgent need for the development of pharmacological treatments that are safe, efficacious and non-habit forming. The proposed adaptive platform RCT would thus provide pivotal evidence to optimize treatment in pain disorders for Veterans that could be easily translated to active duty and civilian populations. This RCT thus potentially represents a therapeutic breakthrough for the treatment of pain and may also have the added benefit of mitigating other commonly co-occurring symptoms.

注册库
clinicaltrials.gov
开始日期
2026年6月1日
结束日期
2029年12月31日
最后更新
11天前
研究类型
Interventional
研究设计
Parallel
性别
All

研究者

责任方
Sponsor

入排标准

入选标准

  • Veterans, 18-65 years of age with chronic low back pain.
  • Based on medical history and medical records, have low back pain (Thoracic Vertebrae 6 or below) present on most days for the preceding 6 months or longer, and fulfill all disease diagnostic criteria (please see disease diagnostic criteria below).
  • Have a weekly mean of 24-hour average pain score 4 at baseline.
  • Negative pregnancy test if female. Sexually active subjects are required to use a medically acceptable form of birth control if they are of childbearing potential and could become pregnant during the study. A medically acceptable form of birth control includes non-hormonal intrauterine devices, surgical sterilization, or double barrier methods (e.g. diaphragm with contraceptive jelly, condom with contraceptive foam, cervical caps with contraceptive jelly). Sexual abstinence with agreement to continue abstinence or to use a medically acceptable method of contraception (as listed above) should sexual activity occur is permissible.
  • No change in medications less than 4 weeks before baseline.
  • No anticipated need to alter psychotropic or pain medications for the 6-wk study duration (as determined by study physician's review of records and/or discussion with prescribing physician).
  • Ability to fully participate in the informed consent process.

排除标准

  • Unstable medical or neurological illness, including seizures, renal impairment or cerebral vascular accident (CVA).
  • Use of oral contraceptives or other hormonal supplements-this is out of caution, as it is unknown if the study medications would impact the efficacy of hormonal contraception.
  • Significant suicidal or homicidal ideation that necessitates intervention.
  • Daily use of long or short-acting narcotic medications (PRN use will be considered).
  • Current DSM-5 diagnosis of bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, or other psychotic disorder, or cognitive disorder due to a general medical condition.
  • Female participants who are pregnant or breast-feeding.
  • Known allergy to study medication.
  • History of moderate or severe TBI (mild TBI is permissible).
  • DSM-5 criteria met for alcohol and/or other substance abuse or dependence within past three months (excludes caffeine and nicotine).
  • Have received epidural steroids, facet block, nerve block or other invasive procedures aimed to reduce low back pain within the past 3 months prior to Visit

研究组 & 干预措施

Pregnenolone

Pregnenolone dosing will begin at 500mg/day x 7 days, and will increase by 500mg each following week as tolerated (to a potential maximum dose 2000mg/day).

干预措施: Pregnenolone

Placebo

Same as active comparator arms, except placebo dispensed

干预措施: Placebo

DHEA

DHEA dosing will begin at 100mg/day x 7 days, and will increase by 100mg each following week as tolerated (to a potential maximum dose 400mg/day).

干预措施: DHEA

结局指标

主要结局

Pain Numerical Rating Scale (0-10) Change

时间窗: Visit 1 (Week 1/screening), Visit 2 (Week 2/Randomization/Baseline), Visit 3 (Week 3), Visit 4 (Week 4), Visit 5 (Week 5), Visit 6 (Week 6)

Weekly mean of the 24-hour average pain severity scores recorded daily on an 11-point numerical rating scale, an ordinal scale ranging from 0 (no pain) to 10 (worst possible pain).

次要结局

  • Brief Pain Inventory(Visit 1 (Week 1/screening), Visit 2 (Week 2/Randomization/Baseline), Visit 3 (Week 3), Visit 4 (Week 4), Visit 5 (Week 5), Visit 6 (Week 6))

研究点 (2)

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