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RECRUITING
NCT05741788
NA

The Teaspoon Study - Telefitting Spinal Cord Stimulation for Pain

Sponsor: University of Minnesota

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Spinal cord stimulation modulates the nervous system to effectively block pain signals originating from the back and legs. Spinal cord stimulation has been shown to improve chronic pain, improve quality of life, and reduce disability. Unfortunately, spinal cord stimulation has a high trial failure rate and a high long-term failure rate. This study consists of a prospective cohort of patients clinically scheduled to undergo spinal cord stimulation for the treatment of chronic back pain or radiculopathy. Participants will undergo a structured optimization evaluating existing types of stimulation (tonic, burst, and multistim). Each participant will try out all types of available stimulation but be blinded to the type. Over the course of four months, each participant will evaluate each type of stimulation by reporting daily pain scores. Thompson sampling will be used to identify which setting produces the biggest improvement in pain and recommend it for future use. Participants will follow up routinely to collect laboratory, behavioral, and survey responses to test for the feasibility of obtaining data explaining pain phenotype.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

22 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

15

Start Date

2023-10-01

Completion Date

2028-10-01

Last Updated

2025-10-02

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DEVICE

Various Stimulation Patterns

Participants will undergo a structured optimization evaluating existing types of stimulation (tonic, burst, and multistim). Each participant will try out all types of available stimulation but be blinded to the type. Over the course of four months, each participant will evaluate each type of stimulation by reporting daily pain scores. Participants will follow up routinely to collect laboratory, behavioral, and survey responses to test for the feasibility of obtaining data explaining pain phenotype.

Locations (1)

University of Minnesota

Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States