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Cognitive Bias Modification for Interpretation (CBM-I) in People With Type 2 Diabetes and Persistent Pain

Cognitive Bias Modification for Interpretation (CBM-I) in People With Type 2 Diabetes and Persistent Pain

Recruiting
18 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

The goal of this clinical trial is to examine the efficacy of cognitive bias modification for interpretation (CBM-I) in people with Type 2 Diabetes and persistent pain. The main question\[s\] it aims to answer is whether interpretation bias training away from pain improves pain outcomes.

Participants in the CBM-I group will complete 4 online training sessions approximately half an hour each. Each session will present participants with ambiguous scenarios which may be pain-related, however the final word of the sentence will resolve the scenario as benign (thus training participants to make benign interpretations). A measure of interpretation bias will be administered following the fourth training session, and pain severity and interference will be measured at baseline, post-training, two week follow up, and three month follow up.

The study hypothesises that participants in the CBM-I group will demonstrate a greater reduction in the co-primary outcomes of pain severity and pain interference over time compared to those in the placebo control.

Description

Pre-intervention stage The study will employ a dual consent process. First, participants will complete an "expression of interest" survey which contains the eligibility survey. Given it is crucial for the study to include people with diabetes and persistent pain, this eligibility survey will be used to ensure the sample meets our eligibility criteria of being 1) are over 18 years of age; 2) have been diagnosed with type 2 diabetes; 3) have persistent pain; 4) score ≥ 3 on pain severity subscale on BPI; 5) fluent in English; 6) have access to internet and ability to use a computer over three months.

Participants deemed eligible for the study will be provided with the Participant Information Statement and consent form via Qualtrics, which will provide detailed information about the study, the nature of their participation, and their rights as participants, including the right to withdraw at any point. Participants who do not consent to participate will be redirected to the end-of-survey.

After providing consent, participants will be asked to complete the baseline questionnaires: Brief Pain Inventory (BPI), Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale (DASS-21), 12-Item Short Form Survey (SF-12), the Worries about Recurrence or Progression Scale (WARPS) and the Treatment adherence perception (TAPQ). The rationale of these measures is that they are theoretically related to interpretation biases and are hypothesised to change following training. This is expected to take approximately 15-20 minutes of their time.

Intervention stage Immediately following completion of baseline questionaries, participants will be randomised to either the CBM-I or placebo groups automatically using a computer algorithm in Qualtrics and invited to participate in the first session (training session 1) (day 1). Neither the participants nor the researchers will be aware of which group the participant has been allocated to.

Three days after completion of the first training session (day 4), participants will be invited via email automated by Qualtrics to the next training session (training session 2). On day 7, participants will be invited to the next training session (training session 3). Each training session is expected to take 10-15 minutes.

On day 14, participants will be invited to the final training session (training session 4), which will be followed immediately by the follow-up questions (follow-up 1). Participants will therefore complete four training sessions in total over the course of 14 days.

Participants will complete the BPI questionnaire prior to each CBM-I training session. Such that, BPI is measured at baseline, prior to CBM-I training session, and at two follow-up points: 2 weeks and 3 months post-intervention.

Note that participants will be asked to complete the training within two days of being email the link. The training sessions are not mandatory, and whether the participants complete each training session they will be still sent the links for the remaining training sessions.

Post-treatment On day 14, following the final training, participants will complete a series of questionnaires: BPI, DASS-21, SF-12, WARPS, TAPQ, Ambiguous cues task, Recognition Task, Post-Intervention Questionnaire. This survey is estimated to take up to approximately 30-35 minutes (inclusive of training time).

Follow-up 1 Exactly two weeks after post-treatment (day 28), participants will be invited via email and asked to complete the follow-up questionnaires (same as baseline), and the post-intervention questionnaire. This is estimated to take 15-20 minutes.

Follow-up 2 Three months after post-treatment, participants will be invited via email and asked to complete the follow-up questionnaires (same as baseline) and the post-intervention questionnaire. This is estimated to take 15-20 minutes. As outlined in the debrief statement, if the CBM-I intervention appears to be beneficial at the conclusion of the study, access to the training will be provided for all placebo group participants.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Over 18 years of age
  • Have a diagnosis of Type 2 diabetes.
  • Have persistent pain (pain present on more days than not, for 3 months or longer).
  • Score ≥ 3 on average pain severity on the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI).
  • Fluent in English
  • Have access to internet and ability to use a computer over a three month period.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Under 18 years of age
  • No diagnosis of Type 2 diabetes
  • No persistent pain
  • Not fluent in English
  • No access to internet nor ability to use a computer.

Study details
    Type 2 Diabetes
    Persistent Pain

NCT06908486

University of Sydney

14 May 2026

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