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Clinical Research Directory

Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.

4 clinical studies listed.

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Chronic Pain, Widespread

Tundra lists 4 Chronic Pain, Widespread clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

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RECRUITING

NCT06929598

Shiatsu for Chronic Non-Inflammatory Pain in Children and Adolescents

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if adding Shiatsu therapy to standard treatment can improve quality of life in children and adolescents with chronic pain that is not caused by inflammation. The main question it aims to answer is: Does Shiatsu therapy help improve the quality of life in children with long-lasting pain? All participants will continue their regular treatment and will also: * Receive a 30-minute Shiatsu session once a week for six weeks * Complete questionnaires about their quality of life and family impact before, during, and after the treatment period The study includes about 40 participants between the ages of 10 and 18, who are already being followed at the pediatric pain and rheumatology clinics at Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center.

Gender: All

Ages: 10 Years - 18 Years

Updated: 2025-09-04

1 state

Chronic Pain
Chronic Pain Syndrome
Chronic Pain and Comorbid Emotional Problems
+5
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT07081737

Person-Centred AI Support in Interdisciplinary Rehabilitation for Chronic Pain

This cluster randomized controlled trial evaluates whether a person-centred, AI-supported Clinical Decision Support System (CDSS) can improve outcomes and cost-effectiveness in interdisciplinary rehabilitation for people with complex chronic pain. The CDSS is designed to assist clinicians in making personalized treatment decisions within standard interdisciplinary treatment (IDT). It has been developed using machine learning models trained on real-world data from over 100,000 patients in the Swedish Quality Registry for Pain Rehabilitation (SQRP), linked to several national registers, including the National Patient Register, the Prescribed Drug Register, the Social Insurance Agency database (MiDAS), and the Cause of Death Register. This enables individualized predictions of treatment outcomes, work ability, and healthcare utilization. The trial includes 400 adult patients with chronic pain, enrolled at 20 IDT clinics randomized to either CDSS-supported or standard IDT. The study has three phases: feasibility, effectiveness, and implementation. The primary outcome is a patient-prioritized composite single-index of health-related well-being, based on domains such as pain, sleep, physical and mental health, emotional distress, and work ability. Patients prioritize these domains together with their clinical team, enabling a person-centred assessment. Secondary outcomes include HRQoL (EQ-5D, SF-36), emotional distress (HADS), and work ability (WAI), measured at baseline, post-treatment, 6- and 12-month follow-up. A parallel mixed-methods process evaluation will examine implementation outcomes such as usability, clinician adherence, and workflow integration, using logs, surveys (e.g., S-NoMAD), and interviews. Normalization Process Theory guides the analysis. Cost-utility will be assessed using QALYs and ICERs from a societal perspective, with long-term projections using simulation models. Results will be reported in peer-reviewed publications.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 67 Years

Updated: 2025-07-23

1 state

Pain, Chronic
Chronic Pain, Widespread
Pain Management
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT03705104

Living Well with Chronic Pain

The goal of this project is to test the effect of an interactive e-health intervention for people with chronic pain.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-03-21

Chronic Pain, Widespread
RECRUITING

NCT06795386

Chronic Widespread Pain After Rapid Weight Loss in Non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic/Latino/a/x Adults

The goal of this observational study is to learn if surgical weight loss can improve chronic widespread pain in people living with higher BMI who self-identify as Hispanic/Latino ethnicity or non-Hispanic Black based on the United States census racial categories. The main questions the study aims to answer are: 1. Do pain at rest (primary outcome) and movement-evoked pain (secondary outcome) improve after bariatric surgery? 2. Do pain processing and joint function change after bariatric surgery? 3. Are pain processing and joint function associated with clinically significant pain change after surgical weight loss? Researchers will compare pain and function before and 6 months after bariatric surgery in a single cohort.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 75 Years

Updated: 2025-01-28

1 state

Chronic Pain, Widespread
Obesity
Bariatric Surgery Candidate