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RECRUITING
NCT06288256

Neurocognitive and Genomic Predictors of Persistent Pain and Opioid Misuse After Spine Surgery

Sponsor: Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Having spine surgery and recovery is a vulnerable period when opioid naive patients may transition into long-term use of opioids, and when previously opioid tolerant patients may be at risk to continue towards long-term opioid use and dependence. However, little is known about risk for developing opioid misuse, taking opioids differently than indicated or prescribed, and later OUD. This study addresses the question of whether behavior, cognitive features, and genomic markers can predict misuse of opioids, persistent pain and disability in individuals after spine surgery. To determine if impulsivity, inhibitory control, drug choice, and/or cognitive distortions predict opioid misuse and disability in spine surgery patients with differential gene expression. This is a prospective observational longitudinal study characterizing behavioral phenotypes in adults undergoing spine surgery using both patient-reported survey measures, cognitive testing and blood sampling. Outcome measures include correlations between impulsivity measures, opioid drug choice responses and cognitive distortion scores, and opioid misuse with spine related disability, and gene expression counts.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

60

Start Date

2023-03-27

Completion Date

2026-07

Last Updated

2024-10-16

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

OTHER

No Intervention

No Intervention

Locations (1)

Mount Sinai Spine Center

New York, New York, United States