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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT04980612
NA

Development and Feasibility of Mindfulness Based Pain Reduction

Sponsor: University of California, San Francisco

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

This is a development study with clinical outcomes. The investigators aim to develop and test an 8-week MBPR (Mindfulness-Based Pain Reduction) program, which draws on intervention work and clinical experience in the investigative team to optimize a mindfulness-based intervention for individuals with chronic pain. The overall goal of this study is to ensure that the MBPR program has been carefully refined and manualized in an in-person setting before performing clinical trials comparing MBPR to MBSR (Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction) to test whether it improves pain outcomes. This study includes a Pain Attention Task that separates insula activation during experimental heat application between different pain attention conditions.

Official title: Feasibility Clinical Trial of Integrated Mind-Body Therapy for Chronic Low Back Pain

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

52

Start Date

2021-12-14

Completion Date

2025-12-01

Last Updated

2025-04-10

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Mindfulness Based Pain Reduction

40 participants will participate in a MBPR program. It will be an optimized mindfulness program specifically designed for treating cLBP that we will develop and test in this project. The format is the same as MBSR: 8 weeks of weekly 2½-hour group sessions and a daylong retreat.

BEHAVIORAL

Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction

10 participants will participate in MBSR program. MBSR is a standardized and manualized 8-week program, delivered once a week in 2½-hour group sessions and a daylong retreat. It trains individuals in several mindfulness practices, e.g. focus on breath, varying degrees and directions of object orientation, open monitoring of awareness of intero- and exteroceptive stimuli and thoughts, de-reification (i.e. the notion that thoughts and perceptions are not always true to reality), and meta-awareness (i.e., awareness of thinking) in addition to focused attention.The program typically includes audio-recordings and a workbook for home practice and has shown benefits in patients with cLBP.

Locations (1)

University of California San Francisco; Osher Center for Intgerative Medicine

San Francisco, California, United States