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Personalised rehabilitation to improve return to work in patients with persistent spinal pain syndrome type II after spinal cord stimulation implantation

Authors :
OPERA consortium
Moens, Maarten
Goudman, Lisa
Van De Velde, Dominique
Godderis, Lode
Putman, Koen
Callens, Jonas
Lavreysen, Olivia
Ceulemans, Dries
Leysen, Laurence
De Smedt, Ann
Pain in Motion
Supporting clinical sciences
Neuroprotection & Neuromodulation
Radiology
Neurosurgery
Physiotherapy, Human Physiology and Anatomy
Brussels Heritage Lab
Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy
Radiation Therapy
Public Health Sciences
Organisation, policy and social inequalities in health care
Interuniversity Centre For Health Economics Research
Rehabilitation Research
UZB Other
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
Clinical sciences
Theys, Tom
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BioMed Central, 2022.

Abstract

Background For patients with therapy-refractory persistent spinal pain syndrome type II (PSPS-T2), spinal cord stimulation (SCS) may serve as an effective minimally invasive treatment. Despite the evidence that SCS can improve return to work (RTW), only 9.5 to 14% of patients implanted with SCS are effectively capable of returning to work. Thus, it seems that current post-operative interventions are not effective for achieving RTW after SCS implantation in clinical practice. The current objective is to examine whether a personalised biopsychosocial rehabilitation programme specifically targeting RTW alters the work ability in PSPS-T2 patients after SCS implantation compared to usual care. Methods A two-arm, parallel-group multicentre randomised controlled trial will be conducted including 112 patients who will be randomised (1:1) to either (a) a personalised biopsychosocial RTW rehabilitation programme of 14 weeks or (b) a usual care arm, both with a follow-up period until 12 months after the intervention. The primary outcome is work ability. The secondary outcomes are work status and participation, pain intensity, health-related quality of life, physical activity and functional disability, functional capacities, sleep quality, kinesiophobia, self-management, anxiety, depression and healthcare expenditure. Discussion Within the OPERA project, we propose a multidisciplinary personalised biopsychosocial rehabilitation programme specifically targeting RTW for patients implanted with SCS, to tackle the high socio-economic burden of patients that are not re-entering the labour market. The awareness is growing that the burden of PSPS-T2 on our society is expected to increase over time due to the annual increase of spinal surgeries. However, innovative and methodologically rigorous trials exploring the potential to decrease the socio-economic burden when patients initiate a trajectory with SCS are essentially lacking. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05269212. Registered on 7 March 2022.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fd60e19325542911533a7f838af8b86f