Description
Investigators recently developed a novel psychological treatment called Pain Reprocessing Therapy (PRT). Using a combination of cognitive, exposure-based, and somatic psychotherapy techniques, PRT aims to promote patients’ reconceptualization of pain as due to reversible, non-dangerous brain activity rather than peripheral pathology. Critically, PRT aims to reduce or eliminate pain, rather than merely increase functioning.
In the first trial of PRT (N = 151), 66% of patients randomized to PRT were pain-free or nearly pain-free at post-treatment, compared to fewer than 20% of those in the placebo and usual care control groups. This trial was limited to chronic back pain and the efficacy and mechanisms of PRT for chronic post-operative knee pain are unknown. Additionally, how the effects of PRT will generalize to telehealth treatment is not known.
Developing scalable, effective, non-pharmacological chronic pain treatments and testing their efficacy in underserved populations is an urgent societal need. Accordingly, this study also tests a remotely delivered PRT intervention.
Aim 1 of this study is to test the comparative efficacy of PRT vs. usual care on pain intensity and other pain-related outcomes at post-treatment and longitudinal follow-up.
Aim 2 of this study is to test hypothesized psychological and neurobiological mechanisms of PRT with mediation analyses and longitudinal EEG neuroimaging.