Developing an Objective Measure of Experienced Pain

Sponsor
University of Zurich (Other)
Overall Status
Enrolling by invitation
CT.gov ID
NCT05415423
Collaborator
Balgrist University Hospital (Other)
424
1
7
46.8
9.1

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

Pain is a public health challenge around the world. However, there is no single standardized measure of pain, to the point that the estimated prevalence of chronic pain in adults ranges between 2% and 64% depending on the methods and definitions used. Existing measures of pain are known to present several problems and results can be hardly compared between people.

The investigators propose and empirically validate a new, simple method to measure experienced pain in clinical trials. The method provides an objective, cardinal measurement of experienced pain which is comparable between people and the investigators test whether it is better able to measure experienced pain than existing procedures. The investigators test the new method in healthy participants using standard protocols (electrical and heat stimuli). The investigators also aim to validate the measure using a causal manipulation which relies on the administration of a topical analgesic product compared to a placebo.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Behavioral: Developing an objective measure of experienced pain
N/A

Detailed Description

The aim of this study is to establish and validate the proposed method of measuring pain using different pain stimuli. The investigators correlate these measurements with physiological data such as skin-conductance, heart-rate variability, pupil dilation, and with established measures of pain such as Numeric rating scale (NRS), Visual analog scale (VAS), general Labeled Magnitude Scale (gLMS). In addition, the investigators study the test-retest reliability of our measure of pain and its ability to capture a reduction in experienced pain due to a topical analgesic product compared to a placebo treatment.

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Anticipated Enrollment :
424 participants
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention Model:
Parallel Assignment
Masking:
Single (Participant)
Primary Purpose:
Basic Science
Official Title:
Developing an Objective Measure of Experienced Pain
Anticipated Study Start Date :
Jun 6, 2022
Anticipated Primary Completion Date :
May 1, 2026
Anticipated Study Completion Date :
May 1, 2026

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Active Comparator: Study 1 Low-Intensity Group

Control group which receives less intense electrical stimuli than the other.

Behavioral: Developing an objective measure of experienced pain
At the beginning of each study, participants are randomly allocated into one of two groups. Within each group all participants are exposed to the same painful stimulus. One group experiences a painful stimulus of higher intensity compared to that of the other group. The painful stimuli are physically identical for every subject within the same group and within the standard of previous pain research. Participants are then asked to evaluate the painful stimulus they just received according to a self-reported scale (NRS, VAS, gLMS, NRS-MB). Participants are also asked to decide multiple times whether they prefer a larger amount of money and experience the same or more painful stimulus they received before or a smaller amount of money and no (or a less) painful stimulus. The smaller amount of money is progressively increased across choices until it matches the larger amount, similar to multiple price-list methods (MPL) which are standard in economics.

Experimental: Study 1 High-Intensity Group

Group which receives more intense electrical stimuli than the other.

Behavioral: Developing an objective measure of experienced pain
At the beginning of each study, participants are randomly allocated into one of two groups. Within each group all participants are exposed to the same painful stimulus. One group experiences a painful stimulus of higher intensity compared to that of the other group. The painful stimuli are physically identical for every subject within the same group and within the standard of previous pain research. Participants are then asked to evaluate the painful stimulus they just received according to a self-reported scale (NRS, VAS, gLMS, NRS-MB). Participants are also asked to decide multiple times whether they prefer a larger amount of money and experience the same or more painful stimulus they received before or a smaller amount of money and no (or a less) painful stimulus. The smaller amount of money is progressively increased across choices until it matches the larger amount, similar to multiple price-list methods (MPL) which are standard in economics.

Active Comparator: Study 2 Low-Intensity Group

Control group which receives less intense heat stimuli than the other.

Behavioral: Developing an objective measure of experienced pain
At the beginning of each study, participants are randomly allocated into one of two groups. Within each group all participants are exposed to the same painful stimulus. One group experiences a painful stimulus of higher intensity compared to that of the other group. The painful stimuli are physically identical for every subject within the same group and within the standard of previous pain research. Participants are then asked to evaluate the painful stimulus they just received according to a self-reported scale (NRS, VAS, gLMS, NRS-MB). Participants are also asked to decide multiple times whether they prefer a larger amount of money and experience the same or more painful stimulus they received before or a smaller amount of money and no (or a less) painful stimulus. The smaller amount of money is progressively increased across choices until it matches the larger amount, similar to multiple price-list methods (MPL) which are standard in economics.

Experimental: Study 2 High-Intensity Group

Group which receives more intense heat stimuli than the other.

Behavioral: Developing an objective measure of experienced pain
At the beginning of each study, participants are randomly allocated into one of two groups. Within each group all participants are exposed to the same painful stimulus. One group experiences a painful stimulus of higher intensity compared to that of the other group. The painful stimuli are physically identical for every subject within the same group and within the standard of previous pain research. Participants are then asked to evaluate the painful stimulus they just received according to a self-reported scale (NRS, VAS, gLMS, NRS-MB). Participants are also asked to decide multiple times whether they prefer a larger amount of money and experience the same or more painful stimulus they received before or a smaller amount of money and no (or a less) painful stimulus. The smaller amount of money is progressively increased across choices until it matches the larger amount, similar to multiple price-list methods (MPL) which are standard in economics.

Placebo Comparator: Study 3 Placebo group

A group that receives a placebo cream.

Behavioral: Developing an objective measure of experienced pain
At the beginning of each study, participants are randomly allocated into one of two groups. Within each group all participants are exposed to the same painful stimulus. One group experiences a painful stimulus of higher intensity compared to that of the other group. The painful stimuli are physically identical for every subject within the same group and within the standard of previous pain research. Participants are then asked to evaluate the painful stimulus they just received according to a self-reported scale (NRS, VAS, gLMS, NRS-MB). Participants are also asked to decide multiple times whether they prefer a larger amount of money and experience the same or more painful stimulus they received before or a smaller amount of money and no (or a less) painful stimulus. The smaller amount of money is progressively increased across choices until it matches the larger amount, similar to multiple price-list methods (MPL) which are standard in economics.

Experimental: Study 3 Painkiller group

A group that receives a topical analgesic such as EMLA cream.

Behavioral: Developing an objective measure of experienced pain
At the beginning of each study, participants are randomly allocated into one of two groups. Within each group all participants are exposed to the same painful stimulus. One group experiences a painful stimulus of higher intensity compared to that of the other group. The painful stimuli are physically identical for every subject within the same group and within the standard of previous pain research. Participants are then asked to evaluate the painful stimulus they just received according to a self-reported scale (NRS, VAS, gLMS, NRS-MB). Participants are also asked to decide multiple times whether they prefer a larger amount of money and experience the same or more painful stimulus they received before or a smaller amount of money and no (or a less) painful stimulus. The smaller amount of money is progressively increased across choices until it matches the larger amount, similar to multiple price-list methods (MPL) which are standard in economics.

No Intervention: Study 4 test-retest reliability group

Participants who participated in either Study 1 or 2 are recruited. They will experience both electrical and heat stimuli.

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcome Measures

  1. Choices between monetary amounts and painful stimuli [baseline]

    Participants' choices between monetary amounts and painful stimuli

  2. self-reported pain ratings according to Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) [baseline]

    self-reported pain ratings according to Numerical Rating Scale

  3. self-reported pain ratings according to Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) [baseline]

    self-reported pain ratings according to Visual Analogue Scale

  4. self-reported pain ratings according to general Labeled Magnitude Scale (gLMS) [baseline]

    self-reported pain ratings according to general Labeled Magnitude Scale

  5. response times [baseline]

    Response times relative to participants' choices between monetary amounts and painful stimuli

Secondary Outcome Measures

  1. heart rate variability [baseline]

    variation in heat-beat rate in reaction to the painful stimuli.

  2. skin conductance [baseline]

    variation in skin conductance in reaction to the painful stimuli.

  3. pupil dilation [baseline]

    variation in pupil dilation in reaction to the painful stimuli.

Eligibility Criteria

Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study:
18 Years to 60 Years
Sexes Eligible for Study:
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
Yes
Inclusion Criteria:
  • age 18-60 years.

  • ability and willingness to participate in the study

  • declaration of consent

  • good English language skills (to ensure understanding of all instructions and the declaration of consent).

Exclusion Criteria:
  • inability to give the declaration of consent (e.g. due to linguistic difficulties understanding the study information)

  • any neurological disorders

  • reduced general health / chronic diseases (e.g. autoimmune disease, severe cardiovascular diseases, insulin-dependent diabetes, severe depression); chronic pain disorders

  • pregnancy

  • in the week before the experimental session self-reported intake of drugs which could influence pain perception (e.g. cannabis and ADHD medications).

Contacts and Locations

Locations

Site City State Country Postal Code
1 SNS Laboratory Zürich CH Switzerland 8091

Sponsors and Collaborators

  • University of Zurich
  • Balgrist University Hospital

Investigators

None specified.

Study Documents (Full-Text)

None provided.

More Information

Publications

None provided.
Responsible Party:
University of Zurich
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT05415423
Other Study ID Numbers:
  • 2022-00236
First Posted:
Jun 13, 2022
Last Update Posted:
Jun 13, 2022
Last Verified:
Jun 1, 2022
Individual Participant Data (IPD) Sharing Statement:
Undecided
Plan to Share IPD:
Undecided
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product:
No
Keywords provided by University of Zurich
Additional relevant MeSH terms:

Study Results

No Results Posted as of Jun 13, 2022