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The efficacy, safety, and satisfaction of telehealth-delivered hypnotic cognitive therapy for chronic pain in spinal cord injury: A pilot study with historical controls.

Authors :
Bombardier CH
Chan JF
Stensland E
Barber J
Jensen MP
Source :
The journal of spinal cord medicine [J Spinal Cord Med] 2024 Sep 03, pp. 1-12. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Sep 03.
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Ahead of Print

Abstract

Context/objective: In-person hypnotic cognitive therapy (HYP-CT) is a promising treatment for chronic spinal cord injury-related pain. We describe the effects of HYP-CT delivered via Zoom (Z-HYP-CT) and compare the effects to historical controls who received hypnosis, cognitive therapy, or HYP-CT in-person.<br />Design: Open pilot trial of HYP-CT versus historical controls.<br />Setting: Telehealth study that recruited people with chronic SCI.<br />Participants: Adults with moderate to severe chronic SCI-related pain.<br />Interventions: Four weekly sessions of HYP-CT delivered via Zoom.<br />Outcome Measures: The primary outcome was average pain intensity on a 0-10 numerical rating scale measured at end of treatment (4 weeks) and 12 weeks. Secondary outcomes included pain interference, depression, sleep, pain catastrophizing, and pain self-efficacy.<br />Results: 23 individuals with SCI-related pain participated in the open trial and were compared to 21 historical controls. Average age was 54 years, 70% were male, and the majority were White. The participants were 11.6-13.1 years post-SCI and average pain intensity was 4.8-5.4/10. After Z-HYP-CT mixed-effects linear regressions showed that pain intensity was significantly less at 4 weeks (-1.28, P  < .0001) and 12 weeks (-1.50, P  < .0001) relative to baseline. Pain interference, depression, and pain catastrophizing also decreased significantly at both time points. There were no significant differences between the effects of Z-HYP-CT versus historical controls on any outcome variable.<br />Conclusion: HYP-CT delivered via telehealth was associated with reduced pain intensity and other benefits that were comparable to the effect achieved by in-person historical controls. The effects of Z-HYP-CT should be evaluated using a randomized controlled design.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2045-7723
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The journal of spinal cord medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39225543
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/10790268.2024.2395080