PAIN+ CPN

Murphy AE, Buchtel H, Mawla I, et al. Temporal Summation but Not Expectations of Pain Relief Predict Response to Acupuncture Treatment in Fibromyalgia. J Pain. 2024 Jul 8:104622. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2024.104622. (Original study)
Abstract

Fibromyalgia (FM) is a common chronic pain condition for which acupuncture treatment is increasingly utilized. However, there is no universally accepted measure to predict whether a specific patient will benefit from acupuncture. This is a single-center, single-blind, sham-controlled, randomized, noncrossover, longitudinal trial of 76 subjects with FM, assigned to either electroacupuncture (EA) or a placebo control, mock laser (ML) acupuncture. Outcome measures included clinical pain severity (Brief Pain Inventory [BPI]), degree of nociplastic pain (Fibromyalgia Survey Questionnaire), and pressure pain tolerance (PPtol). Baseline measures of temporal summation of pain and expectations for treatment relief were used as predictors. Individuals in both treatment groups experienced significant reductions in BPI (EA: P < .001, ML: P = .018) and Fibromyalgia Survey Questionnaire (EA: P = .032, ML: P = .002) after treatment; however, neither group showed a significant increase in PPtol. Lower temporal summation at baseline was correlated with greater post-treatment improvement in BPI in the EA group (rho = .389, P = .025) but not in the ML group (rho = -.272, P = .109). Lower-baseline temporal summation was correlated with greater decreases in PPtol following EA (rho = .400, P = .040), whereas the opposite was seen for ML (rho = -.562, P = .001). Treatment expectancy at baseline was not correlated with any outcome after EA or ML treatments. Our results support using a quantitative sensory testing metric, temporal summation of pain, but not expectations, to predict analgesia following acupuncture treatment for pain. PERSPECTIVE: A randomized study of acupuncture in FM found baseline temporal summation, but not expectations of pain relief, to be predictive of treatment response. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: Registered under ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT02064296.

Ratings
Discipline Area Score
Physician 5 / 7
Rehab Clinician (OT/PT) 5 / 7
Show me more articles about:
  Chronic Pain   Fibromyalgia
Comments from MORE raters

Rehab Clinician (OT/PT) rater

This paper considers participants with FM receiving either acupuncture or deactivated laser from a parent study. Participants know which treatment they will be receiving, but have been told that both are effective. Sham procedures are notoriously difficult, particularly in acupuncture. This study design doesn't eliminate the placebo response since placebo is greater in the presence of a perceived procedure. Also there have been some findings that just the belief of the clinician providing the treatment influences the effect. It is interesting that the predictors of efficacy for people with FM in this study are the same as those that predict efficacy of psychological inputs.
Comments from PAIN+ CPN subscribers

No subscriber has commented on this article yet.