Pain in Sickle Cell Epidemiologic Study
Primary Purpose
Blood Disease, Anemia, Sickle Cell
Status
Completed
Phase
Locations
Study Type
Observational
Intervention
Sponsored by
About this trial
This is an observational trial for Blood Disease
Eligibility Criteria
No eligibility criteria
Sites / Locations
Outcomes
Primary Outcome Measures
Secondary Outcome Measures
Full Information
NCT ID
NCT00035763
First Posted
May 4, 2002
Last Updated
March 23, 2016
Sponsor
Virginia Commonwealth University
Collaborators
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
1. Study Identification
Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT00035763
Brief Title
Pain in Sickle Cell Epidemiologic Study
Official Title
Pain in Sickle Cell Epidemiologic Study
Study Type
Observational
2. Study Status
Record Verification Date
January 2008
Overall Recruitment Status
Completed
Study Start Date
October 2001 (undefined)
Primary Completion Date
August 2006 (Actual)
Study Completion Date
August 2006 (Actual)
3. Sponsor/Collaborators
Name of the Sponsor
Virginia Commonwealth University
Collaborators
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
4. Oversight
5. Study Description
Brief Summary
To measure the variability in pain and response to pain in sickle cell disease, and to build multivariate models to explain both patients' pain and their response to pain, especially, utilization of health care.
Detailed Description
BACKGROUND:
Pain in sickle cell disease is poorly recognized, measured, and treated. Although painful episodes are the most common reason sickle cell patients seek care, studies have seldom directly measured pain in detail. In studies to date, biological and demographic variables alone only partly explain the observed variance in painful episode frequency. Further, little is known about differences in pain responses including home management versus health care utilization.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
This cohort study is measuring the variability in pain and response to pain in sickle cell disease, and building multivariate models to explain both patients' pain and their response to pain, especially, utilization of health care. The models' outcome variables include mean pain, painful episodes, and various types of utilization episodes, including non-narcotic analgesic use, narcotic use, office visits, emergency department (ED visits, and hospitalization. An additional outcome is the percentage of each patient's painful episodes that result in various types of utilization. Outcomes will be operationalized using daily pain diaries collected over six months. Reflecting on the prior 24 hours, patients will recall on an ordinal (0-9) scale maximum pain, distress, and disability, judge whether they were in a "crisis," and note pain locations and their various types of utilization. Daily pain intensity ratings will be transformed into pain episode counts using a formulaic threshold for a painful episode. The formula calculates each patient's threshold individually, based on his/her pain ratings. The models will measure the effect of several classes of explanatory variables (demographic, disease-related, psycho social, and readiness to utilize care), operationalized using primary data and validated instruments.
Patients will be recruited from the central and Tidewater regions of Virginia, will undergo an initial survey battery, chart review, and a brief final survey, venipuncture and urine sampling, and complete pain diaries daily for six months. This study will advance knowledge of the etiology and influences on pain and pain response in sickle cell disease. By revealing potentially mutable explanatory variables, the study's results will suggest targets of biobehavioral treatment interventions.
6. Conditions and Keywords
Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Blood Disease, Anemia, Sickle Cell
7. Study Design
10. Eligibility
Sex
All
Minimum Age & Unit of Time
16 Years
Maximum Age & Unit of Time
100 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No
Eligibility Criteria
No eligibility criteria
Overall Study Officials:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Wally Smith
Organizational Affiliation
Virginia Commonwealth University
12. IPD Sharing Statement
Citations:
PubMed Identifier
15712781
Citation
Smith WR, Bovbjerg VE, Penberthy LT, McClish DK, Levenson JL, Roberts JD, Gil K, Roseff SD, Aisiku IP. Understanding pain and improving management of sickle cell disease: the PiSCES study. J Natl Med Assoc. 2005 Feb;97(2):183-93.
Results Reference
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Pain in Sickle Cell Epidemiologic Study
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