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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Research Protocols

Date Submitted: Jul 14, 2025
Date Accepted: Oct 31, 2025

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

Virtual Reality to Improve Pain Management and Mental Health in Stroke Survivors With Chronic Pain: Study Protocol for a Feasibility Randomized Controlled Trial on Virtual Reality-Acceptance and Commitment Therapy

Carvalho SA, Menezes P, Duarte C, Skvarc D, Sousa e Silva AR, Valentim A, Emanuel Diogo J, Sargento Freitas J, Trindade IA, Castilho P, Lapa T, Andersson G, Castelho-Branco M

Virtual Reality to Improve Pain Management and Mental Health in Stroke Survivors With Chronic Pain: Study Protocol for a Feasibility Randomized Controlled Trial on Virtual Reality-Acceptance and Commitment Therapy

JMIR Res Protoc 2026;15:e80611

DOI: 10.2196/80611

PMID: 41650200

PMCID: 12902207

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.

Virtual Reality to improve pain management and mental health in stroke survivors with chronic pain: Study protocol of the VR-ACT feasibility study

  • Sergio A. Carvalho; 
  • Paulo Menezes; 
  • Catarina Duarte; 
  • David Skvarc; 
  • Ana Rita Sousa e Silva; 
  • Ana Valentim; 
  • João Emanuel Diogo; 
  • João Sargento Freitas; 
  • Inês A. Trindade; 
  • Paula Castilho; 
  • Teresa Lapa; 
  • Gerhard Andersson; 
  • Miguel Castelho-Branco

ABSTRACT

Studies suggest that 40%-65% of stroke survivors develop chronic post-stroke pain (CPSP), which severely affects their quality of life and mental health. Empirical evidence suggests that existing treatments often fall short, underscoring the need for innovative, integrative interventions. Virtual Reality (VR) seems to provide valuable tools in stroke rehabilitation. Also, contextual-behavioural psychological approaches, such as Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), offer promising pain management and mental health resources, which seem to be feasible in VR formats. However, their combined application in CPSP remains unexplored. This study protocol describes the VR-ACT study, which will test the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of an 8-week VR-ACT program for CPSP. A randomized controlled trial (N = 30) will compare a VR-based ACT intervention with a sham-VR control. The study will follow a mixed-methods approach. Quantitative outcomes include pain intensity, psychological symptoms, and quality of life (via self-report measures), and brain network connectivity of the Triple Network (via fMRI). Feasibility will be evaluated through adherence, engagement, and acceptability. Qualitative feedback will be collected post-intervention. This trial is expected to corroborate the hypothesis that a VR-delivered ACT program is a feasible, acceptable, and potentially effective tool to support pain self-management and mental health in CPSP patients, laying the groundwork for larger, multicenter trials. Trial Registration: NCT06990646 registered on clinicaltrials.gov. Trial status: not yet recruiting. Registered 21st May 2025. https://register.clinicaltrials.gov/prs/beta/studies/S000FU3N00000043/recordSummary


 Citation

Please cite as:

Carvalho SA, Menezes P, Duarte C, Skvarc D, Sousa e Silva AR, Valentim A, Emanuel Diogo J, Sargento Freitas J, Trindade IA, Castilho P, Lapa T, Andersson G, Castelho-Branco M

Virtual Reality to Improve Pain Management and Mental Health in Stroke Survivors With Chronic Pain: Study Protocol for a Feasibility Randomized Controlled Trial on Virtual Reality-Acceptance and Commitment Therapy

JMIR Res Protoc 2026;15:e80611

DOI: 10.2196/80611

PMID: 41650200

PMCID: 12902207

Per the author's request the PDF is not available.