Abstract
Background
Up to 27% of the German population suffers from recurrent or persistent pain (lasting more than three months). Therefore, prevention of chronic pain is one major object of pain management interventions. The aim of this nationwide, multicentre, randomised controlled trial is to evaluate the efficacy of a 10-week ambulatory (outpatient) interdisciplinary multimodal pain therapy (A-IMPT) for patients with recurrent pain and at risk of developing chronic pain. This project was initiated by the German Pain Society (Deutsche Schmerzgesellschaft e.V.) and the public health insurance provider BARMER. It is currently funded by the German Innovation Fund (01NVF20023). The study PAIN2.0 focuses on reducing pain intensity and pain-related disability and investigates whether this intervention can improve physical activity, psychological well-being, and health literacy.
Methods
PAIN2.0 is designed as a multicentre 1:1 randomised controlled trial with two parallel groups (randomisation at the patient level, planned N = 1094, duration of study participation 12 months, implemented by 22 health care facilities nationwide). After 6 months, patients within the control group also receive the intervention. The primary outcomes are pain intensity and pain-related impairment, measured as Characteristic Pain Intensity (PI) and Disability Score (DS) (Von Korff), as well as patient-related satisfaction with the intervention. Secondary outcomes are the number of sick leave days, sickness allowance, treatment costs, psychological distress, health-related quality of life, and catastrophizing. The effects of the intervention will be analysed by a parallel-group comparison between the intervention and control groups. In addition, the long-term effects within the intervention group will be observed and a pre-post comparison of the control group before and after the intervention will be performed.
Discussion
Recurrent or persistent pain is common in the German population and causes high costs for patients and society. The A-IMPT aims to improve pain and pain-related impairments in pain patients at risk of chronification, thereby reducing the risk of developing chronic pain with its high socioeconomic burden. This new therapy could easily be integrated into existing therapy programs if positively evaluated.
Trial registration
The trial PAIN2.0 has been registered in the German Clinical Trials Register (DRKS) since 21/11/2022 with the ID
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Details
; Szczotkowski, Daniel 1 ; Schouten, Leonie 2 ; Petzke, Frank 2 ; Milch, Lena 3 ; Metz-Oster, Beatrice 3 ; Zinndorf, Louise 3 ; Geber, Christian 3 ; Hoffmann, Greta 4 ; Preißler, Anke 4 ; Marschall, Ursula 5 ; Rottke, Felix 6 ; Waidner, Anja 6 ; Möller, André 6 ; Isenberg, Thomas 6 ; Lindena, Gabriele 7 ; Gärtner, Anne 4 ; Kaiser, Ulrike 8 ; Kohlmann, Thomas 1 1 University Medicine Greifswald, Institute for Community Medicine, Greifswald, Germany (GRID:grid.412469.c) (ISNI:0000 0000 9116 8976)
2 University Medical Centre Göttingen, Department of Anaesthesiology, Göttingen, Germany (GRID:grid.411984.1) (ISNI:0000 0001 0482 5331)
3 German Red Cross Pain Centre Mainz, Mainz, Germany (GRID:grid.411984.1)
4 University Pain Centre, University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus, Dresden, Germany (GRID:grid.412282.f) (ISNI:0000 0001 1091 2917)
5 BARMER, Wuppertal, Germany (GRID:grid.491614.f) (ISNI:0000 0004 4686 7283)
6 German Pain Society, Berlin, Germany (GRID:grid.491614.f)
7 CLARA Klinische Und Versorgungsforschung, Kleinmachnow, Germany (GRID:grid.491614.f)
8 University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein/Lübeck, Lübeck, Germany (GRID:grid.412468.d) (ISNI:0000 0004 0646 2097)




