Pre-op Cognitive Behavior Therapy to Decrease Chronic Post-Surgical Pain in TKA
Chronic Post-Surgical Pain
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Chronic Post-Surgical Pain focused on measuring CPSP, Chronic Post-Surgical Pain, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Total Knee Arthroplasty, Motivational Interviewing, Opioid Taper
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Males and females, age > 21 years
- Chronic non-malignant pain of at least 3 months duration
- Morphine equivalent daily dose (MEDD) > 40 milligrams for at least 3 months
- Able to enroll at least 4 weeks prior to planned surgery
- Able to speak, read and comprehend in English at the 6th grade or higher proficiency
Exclusion Criteria:
- Pain of malignant origin
- Current or past history of opioid use disorder (including those on medication-assisted therapy)
- Revision of TKA
- Comorbid CNS disease such as dementia, HIV, psychosis, poorly controlled bipolar disorder or any condition interfering with informed consent
Sites / Locations
- Penn Medicine University City
- Penn Presbyterian Medical Center
- Pennsylvania Hospital
- Penn Medicine Radnor
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Active Comparator
No Intervention
Computer-Assisted Preoperative CBT Intervention
Treatment-as-usual (control)
Patients will receive the computer-assisted preoperative CBT intervention (n=75). A particularly promising internet-based CBT pain program for the population of interest, PAINTrainer, demonstrated improved pain, function, coping and global health in patients with chronic knee arthritic pain in comparison to an internet education control, with benefits persisting for up to 52 weeks. In addition to the PAINTrainer, there will be an integration of a motivational interviewing (MI) intervention delivered by a trained "coach" across the sessions about (1) the benefits of opioid tapering for post-operative pain control, (2) approaches for safely tapering, (3) identifying and managing withdrawal symptoms patients may experience.
Patients scheduled to undergo total joint arthroplasty at the study site are automatically enrolled in a mandatory 4-hour education class delivered by a nurse educator or physical therapist. Utilizing an in-person Powerpoint presentation format, patients are informed about pre-habilitation exercises to do prior to surgery; what to expect the day of surgery; the multimodal analgesia protocol used in the perioperative period; options for anesthesia and analgesia; and the expectation of physical therapy after surgery.