An Effective New Treatment for Chronic Back Pain
By UNIVERSITY OF NEW SOUTH WALES
A new treatment offers hope for people challenged with chronic back pain. It focuses on retraining how the back and the brain communicate, and was demonstrated in a randomized controlled trial. The research was performed by scientists at the University of New South Wales (UNSW) Sydney and Neuroscience Research Australia (NeuRA) and several other Australian and European universities.
The
study, was described in a paper published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Funded by
the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC), the study
was carried out at NeuRA. It divided 276 participants into two groups: one
undertook a 12-week course of sensorimotor retraining and the other received a
12-week course of sham treatments designed to control for placebo effects,
which are common in low back pain trials.
Sensorimotor
retraining alters how people think about their body in pain, how they process
sensory information from their back, and how they move their back during
activities, according to Professor James McAuley from UNSW’s School of Health
Sciences, and NeuRA.
“What we observed in our trial was a clinically meaningful effect on pain intensity and a clinically meaningful effect on disability. People were happier, they reported their backs felt better and their quality of life was better. It also looks like these effects were sustained over the long term; twice as many people were completely recovered. Very few treatments for low back pain show long-term benefits, but participants in the trial reported improved quality of life one year later.”
The
new treatment challenges traditional treatments for chronic back pain. This
includes drugs and treatments that focus on the back such as spinal
manipulation, injections, surgery and spinal cord stimulators. It accomplishes
this by viewing long-standing back pain as a modifiable problem of the nervous
system rather than a disc, bone, or muscle problem.
“If
you compare the results to studies looking at opioid
treatment versus placebo, the difference for that is less than
one point out of 10 in pain intensity, it’s only short term and there is little
improvement in disability. We see similar results for studies comparing manual
therapy to sham or exercise to sham,” Prof. McAuley said.
“This
is the first new treatment of its kind for back pain – which has been the
number one cause of the Global Disability Burden for the last 30 years –
that has been tested against placebo.”
How
it works
Prof.
McAuley said the treatment is based on research that showed the nervous system
of people suffering from chronic back pain behaves in a different way from
people who have a recent injury to the lower back.
“People
with back pain are often told their back is vulnerable and needs protecting.
This changes how we filter and interpret information from our back and how we
move our back. Over time, the back becomes less fit, and the way the back and
brain communicate is disrupted in ways that seem to reinforce the notion that
the back is vulnerable and needs protecting. The treatment we devised aims to
break this self-sustaining cycle,” he said.
Professor
Lorimer Moseley AO, Bradley Distinguished Professor at the University of South
Australia said, “This treatment, which includes specially designed education
modules and methods and sensorimotor retraining, aims to correct the
dysfunction we now know is involved in most chronic back pain and that’s a
disruption within the nervous system. The disruption results in two problems: a
hypersensitive pain system and imprecise communication between the back and the
brain.”
The
treatment aims to achieve three goals. The first is to align patient
understanding with the latest scientific understanding about what causes
chronic back pain. The second is to normalize the way the back and the brain
communicate with each other, and thirdly, to gradually retrain the body and the
brain back to a normal protection setting and a resumption of usual activities.
Professor
Ben Wand of Notre Dame University, the clinical director on the trial,
emphasized that by using a program of sensorimotor training, patients can see
that their brain and back are not communicating well, but can also experience
an improvement in this communication. He said, “We think this gives them
confidence to pursue an approach to recovery that trains both the body and the
brain.”
Training
the body and the brain
Traditional
therapies concentrate on fixing something in your back, injecting a disc,
loosening up the joints or strengthening the muscles. What makes sensorimotor
retraining different, according to Prof. McAuley is that it looks at the whole
system – what people think about their back, how the back and brain
communicate, how the back is moved, as well as the fitness of the back.
The
authors of the study say that more research is needed to replicate these
results and to test the treatment in different settings and populations. They
also want to test their approach in other chronic pain states that show similar
disruption within the nervous system. They are optimistic about rolling out a
training package to bring this new treatment to clinics and have enlisted
partner organizations to start that process.
Once
the new treatment is available via trained physiotherapists, exercise
physiologists and other clinicians – Prof. McAuley hopes this to occur in the
next six to nine months – people with chronic back pain should be able to
access it at a similar cost to other therapies offered by those practitioners.
Reference:
“Effect of Graded Sensorimotor Retraining on Pain Intensity in Patients With
Chronic LowBack Pain” 2 August 2022, Journal of the American Medical
Association.
DOI: 10.1001/jama.2022.9930