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Evaluating the Efficacy of Intranasal Oxytocin on Chronic Pain
Sponsor: Memorial University of Newfoundland
Summary
One in five Canadians live with chronic pain, defined as pain that lasts longer than 3-months. Living with chronic pain has a detrimental impact on physical health, emotional health, and quality of life. Current treatments rarely result in pain relief and often do not meaningfully improve physical or emotional function. Further, medication used to treat pain often causes unwanted symptoms. There is a need to develop new treatments to help manage chronic pain. The use of a nasal spray containing manufactured oxytocin may improve pain management. Oxytocin is produced in the human body and has been shown to impact the pain pathway in animals. Our project tests whether the use of a nasal spray containing oxytocin will improve pain and function in men and women who live with chronic pain. Men and women with chronic nerve, muscle, or pelvic pain will be recruited in Vancouver, Calgary, and St. John's. Each person will be assigned to complete three interventions in a random order. Each intervention involves using a nasal spray twice per day over a 2-week period. The nasal spray will contain a small dose of oxytocin during one intervention and a medium dose during the second intervention. The nasal spray during the final intervention will have no oxytocin. This final intervention is a control intervention that will allow us to measure the effect of simply taking a nasal spray (i.e., the impact of expectation). Participants and researchers will not know which interventions involve the use of oxytocin. Participants will rate their pain and function each day throughout each task. The investigators will calculate each person's score on pain and function. The investigators will test whether participants report less pain and better function when they use oxytocin compared to the control. The results of this project may improve pain, function, and quality of life among those who live with chronic pain.
Official title: Evaluating the Efficacy of Intranasal Oxytocin on Pain and Function Among Individuals Who Experience Chronic Pain: A Multisite, Placebo-controlled, Blinded, Sequential, Within-subjects Crossover Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
336
Start Date
2022-04-01
Completion Date
2026-03-31
Last Updated
2026-02-18
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
24-IU oxytocin
Patients will self-administer a 2-week course of 24-IU intranasal oxytocin \[4-IU per puff (12-IU delivered to each nostril); Syntocinon, Novartis, Switzerland\], twice per day (once in the morning and once in the evening).
48-IU oxytocin
Patients will self-administer a 2-week course of 48-IU intranasal oxytocin \[4-IU per puff (24-IU delivered to each nostril); Syntocinon, Novartis, Switzerland\], twice per day (once in the morning and once in the evening).
Placebo
Patients will receive an intranasal placebo containing the same ingredients as the oxytocin nasal spray with the exception of active oxytocin. Administration schedule and procedure will be identical to that described in 24-IU oxytocin.
Locations (3)
Calgary Chronic Pain Centre
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Jim Pattison Outpatient Care & Surgical Centre Pain Clinic (JPOCSC-PC)
Surrey, British Columbia, Canada
Carbonear General Hospital
Carbonear, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada