Overview
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn about a new management system in chronic and stubborn pain patients who accept therapy of spinal cord stimulation (SCS). Usually, these patients are required to take long-term follow-ups to ensure that the stimulator works well. The main questions it aims to answer are:
- Is it better to improve the patient's quality of life than the current conventional follow-up?
- Is it better to relieve pain in the long term than the current conventional follow-up?
- Is it possible to be applied to a large population of chronic pain patients? Participants will be randomly assigned to either a control group or an interventional group.
Participants in the control group will be given the standard SCS implantation surgery and asked to complete the conventional follow-up (at least 1-, 3-, and 6-month post-operative).
Participants in the interventional group will be given the standard SCS implantation surgery and asked to do the following things:
- Take the daily pain self-assessment questions on a mobile phone APP.
- Take the monthly healthy status self-assessment questionnaires on a mobile phone APP.
- Take the conventional follow-up (at least 1-, 3-, and 6-month post-operative). Researchers will compare the two groups to see if the life quality of the interventional group is improved.
Description
Chronic intractable pain is a disorder with complicated causes. The patient's quality of life is significantly reduced as a result of the patient's ongoing discomfort and the necessity for lengthy therapies. When patients don't respond well to medicine or other non-surgical treatments, spinal cord stimulation (SCS) is one of the surgical methods employed. The safety and effectiveness of SCS have previously been confirmed in numerous trials as a well-researched and clinically used therapy. However, the adjustment of SCS is complicated and its optimal effect relies on long-term regular follow-up. With the development of the internet, the investigators put forward a new system with remote and wireless SCS devices. Together with an exclusively developed mobile phone application, patients will be able to record their daily pain state and monthly health condition and make customized stimulation settings accordingly. This study is aimed to test the feasibility of this new precise management system. All participants will be randomly assigned to either interventional or control group. Participants in control group will be asked to take the conventional follow-up. Participants in interventional group will be additionally asked to take self-assessment on daily pain state and monthly health condition. The investigators hypothesized that this self-involved, closely monitored, and precisely adjusted system can significantly improve patients' quality of life in the long term and cut down both the financial expenses and time cost.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Have been clinically diagnosed with chronic, intractable pain for more than three months.
- At enrollment, the average pain intensity is no least than 5 out of 10 cm on visual analogue scale.
- At enrollment, the age is no younger than 18-year-old.
- Ineffective or unsatisfactory conservative treatments, including but limited to: oral medication, nerve block, epidural corticosteroids, physical and psychological rehabilitation therapy, and chiropractic care.
- Voluntary to take the trial and sign the informed consent.
- Good compliance and ability to complete post-operative follow-ups.
- Basic ability to read and use a mobile phone or having a caregiver who can.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Bleeding complications or coagulation disorders.
- Mental or cognitive disorders leading to inability to complete implantation surgery or post-operative follow-up.
- Issues with spinal cord or vertebrates that are not suitable for implantation surgery.
- Systemic active infections or local infections around the surgery area.
- Pregnancy, breast-feeding, plan to be pregnant or unwilling to use contraceptive methods.
- Metastatic malignant tumors or untreated malignant tumors.
- Life expectancy of less than one year.
- Already provided with a medication pump and/or other implanted devices.
- Need for therapy or examination that must not have an implanted pulse generator (IPG), such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and thermo-therapy.
- Heavily addicted to alcohol or drugs.
- VAS improvement less than 50% or stimulation intolerance during the test period.
- Unable to complete long-term online follow-ups because of hardware issues such as internet, mobile phones, and so on.
- Unwilling to participate.
- Other inappropriate situations determined by the investigators.