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Accepted for/Published in: Journal of Medical Internet Research

Date Submitted: Feb 22, 2022
Date Accepted: Apr 26, 2022

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Durability of the Treatment Effects of an 8-Week Self-administered Home-Based Virtual Reality Program for Chronic Low Back Pain: 6-Month Follow-up Study of a Randomized Clinical Trial

Garcia L, Birckhead B, Krishnamurthy P, Mackey I, Sackman J, Salmasi V, Louis R, Castro C, Maddox R, Maddox T, Darnall B

Durability of the Treatment Effects of an 8-Week Self-administered Home-Based Virtual Reality Program for Chronic Low Back Pain: 6-Month Follow-up Study of a Randomized Clinical Trial

J Med Internet Res 2022;24(5):e37480

DOI: 10.2196/37480

PMID: 35612905

PMCID: 9177046

Durability of treatment effects for a randomized placebo-controlled trial of 8-week self-administered at-home behavioral skills-based virtual reality for chronic low back pain: Six-month follow-up

  • Laura Garcia; 
  • Brandon Birckhead; 
  • Parthasarathy Krishnamurthy; 
  • Ian Mackey; 
  • Joshua Sackman; 
  • Vafi Salmasi; 
  • Robert Louis; 
  • Carina Castro; 
  • Roselani Maddox; 
  • Todd Maddox; 
  • Beth Darnall

ABSTRACT

Background:

We previously reported efficacy for an 8-week home-based therapeutic immersive virtual reality (VR) program in a double-blind randomized placebo-controlled study. Community-based adults with self-reported chronic low back pain (CLBP) were randomized 1:1 to receive either (1) 56-day immersive therapeutic pain relief skills VR program or (2) 56-day sham VR program. Immediate post-treatment results revealed superiority for therapeutic vs. sham VR for reducing pain intensity, pain-related interference with activity, mood, and stress (but not sleep), physical function, and sleep disturbance. At 3-months post-treatment, therapeutic VR maintained superiority for reducing pain intensity and pain-related interference with activity, stress, and newly for sleep.

Objective:

The current report assessed between-group and within-group treatment effects 6-months post-treatment to determine extended efficacy, magnitude of efficacy, and clinical importance for home-based therapeutic VR.

Methods:

E-surveys were deployed at pre-treatment, end of treatment, and post-treatment months 1, 2, 3, and 6. Self-reported data for N=188 participants were analyzed in a mixed-model framework using a marginal model to allow for correlated responses across the repeated measures. Primary outcomes were pain intensity and pain-related interference with activity, mood, stress, and sleep at 6 months post-treatment; secondary outcomes were PROMIS sleep disturbance and physical function.

Results:

Therapeutic VR maintained significant and clinically meaningful effects 6 months post-treatment and continued superiority over sham VR for reducing pain intensity and pain-related interference with activity, stress, and sleep (all p’s < 0.003); ds = 0.44 to 0.54). Between-group comparisons for Physical Function and Sleep Disturbance showed superiority for the EaseVRx group versus the Sham VR group (Physical Function: P=.019; ds = 0.34; Sleep Disturbance: P=.0002; ds = 0.46). Participants were encouraged to contact study staff with any problems experienced during treatment; however, no participants contacted study staff to report adverse events of any type, including nausea and motion sickness.

Conclusions:

An 8-week, home-based VR pain management program confers important reductions in pain intensity and interference up to 6 months after treatment. Additional studies are needed in diverse samples. Clinical Trial: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04415177; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04415177


 Citation

Please cite as:

Garcia L, Birckhead B, Krishnamurthy P, Mackey I, Sackman J, Salmasi V, Louis R, Castro C, Maddox R, Maddox T, Darnall B

Durability of the Treatment Effects of an 8-Week Self-administered Home-Based Virtual Reality Program for Chronic Low Back Pain: 6-Month Follow-up Study of a Randomized Clinical Trial

J Med Internet Res 2022;24(5):e37480

DOI: 10.2196/37480

PMID: 35612905

PMCID: 9177046

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