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NCT05553444
Effect of Self-management Intervention on Pain Intensity and Functional Disability in Adolescent Patients With Low Back Pain
NA trial testing Self-management intervention in Low Back Pain in 5 participants. Completed in 22 June 2023.
22 June 2023
Quick facts
| Lead sponsor | Aalborg University |
|---|---|
| Phase | NA |
| Status | Completed |
| Study type | INTERVENTIONAL |
| Allocation | na |
| Design | single group |
| Masking | none |
| Primary purpose | treatment |
| Enrollment | 5 |
| Start date | 30 August 2022 |
| Primary completion | 22 June 2023 |
| Estimated completion | 22 June 2023 |
| Sites | 1 location across Denmark |
Drugs / interventions tested
- Self-management intervention
Conditions studied
- Low Back Pain — all drugs for Low Back Pain →
Sponsor
Aalborg University
Who can join
Adults 15 to 19, any sex, with Low Back Pain. Patients with the condition only — healthy volunteers not accepted.
Sponsor's own description
Low back pain (LBP) is prevalent among adolescents from the general population and in general practice. Not only is LBP associated with pain and functional limitation among patients, also the socioeconomic burden of the condition is substantial worldwide. Chronic cases of LBP are not uncommon in adolescents, especially among those whose parents are suffering from chronic pain. Several individual factors influence LBP among adolescents. Especially previous episodes of LBP, low pain self-efficacy levels and worries about LBP has been identified as worsening factors in regard to pain and disability. At present there is little evidence to inform a large randomized experimental study to investigate the effect of a given treatment modality in this group of young patients. Furthermore, it remains to be investigated if individual factors, such as, pain self-efficacy levels and worries about LBP may mediate the effect of a behavioral intervention regarding pain and disability. However, the single case experimental design allows for close monitoring of the patients during a controlled treatment course. As such, the single case experimental design study can provide vital and fundamental knowledge regarding treatment effect and mediating factors in relation to an intervention aimed at improving self-management in adolescent LBP patients. This study aims to investigate the effect of an intervention to improve self-management among adolescent LBP patients assessed by pain intensity and functional disability in a single case experimental design. We further aimed to investigate if LBP related worries and pain self-efficacy would mediate the effect of the intervention. We hypothesized that the self-management intervention would lead to lower pain intensity scores and decrease disability levels on a patient level.
Publications & conference data
No peer-reviewed publications indexed yet for this trial. Completed trials usually publish results within 12-18 months.
Verify or expand the search:
- PubMed search for NCT05553444
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Related trials
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Trials testing the same drug.
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Currently open trials in the same condition.
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Other Aalborg University trials
Trials by the same sponsor.
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- NCT07266103 — Mechanistic Study of Personalized rTMS in Chronic Pain · NA · not yet recruiting
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Verify against primary sources
- ClinicalTrials.gov — authoritative US registry record
- WHO ICTRP — international registry index
- EU Clinical Trials Register
- Sponsor press releases (Google)
- Trial protocol + status: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05553444 (US National Library of Medicine, public domain)
- Drug + disease cross-links: matched in real time against Drug Landscape's normalised drug + company + condition tables
- Sponsor: as reported to ClinicalTrials.gov by Aalborg University
- Last refreshed: 3 July 2023
Drug Landscape aggregates and links these public records for informational use only. Always verify against the primary source before clinical or regulatory decisions. Canonical URL: https://druglandscape.com/trial/NCT05553444.
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