Funded Projects

Explore our currently funded projects. You may search with all three fields, then focus your results by applying any of the dropdown filters. After customizing your search, you may download results and even save your specific search for later.

Project # Project Title Research Focus Area Research Program Administering IC Institution(s) Investigator(s) Location(s) Year Awarded
1U01DK123814-01
Pain, Opioids, and ESRD risk reduction with Mindfulness and Buprenorphine (POEM-B): A 3-arm multi-site randomized trial in hemodialysis patients Clinical Research in Pain Management Integrated Approach to Pain and Opioid Use in Hemodialysis Patients NIDDK NEW YORK UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE CHARYTAN, DAVID M (contact); LEE, JOSHUA D; SHALLCROSS, AMANDA J New York NY 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Integrated Approach to Pain and Opioid Use in Hemodialysis Patients: The Hemodialysis Opioid Prescription Effort (HOPE) Consortium - Clinical Centers (U01 Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: RFA-DK-18-030
Summary:

In this study, 600 to 700 hemodialysis patients receiving chronic opioids will be randomized across the Hemodialysis Opioid Prescription Effort (HOPE) Consortium to enhanced treatment as usual, buprenorphine therapy, or buprenorphine plus mindfulness-based cognitive therapy intervention delivered by telephone and adapted for pain (MBCT-TP). The following specific aims will be assessed: Aim 1—to assess the effectiveness of buprenorphine in reducing chronic opioid use and prescriptions in hemodialysis patients on opioids at baseline, compared with an enhanced treatment as usual intervention and to assess the effectiveness of buprenorphine in improving pain intensity, quality of life measures, and hospitalizations; Aim 2—to assess the incremental effectiveness of MBCT-TP added to buprenorphine compared with buprenorphine alone on pain interference with physical, social, and mental functioning, opioid use, pain intensity, other quality of life measures, hospitalizations, and mortality.

1U19AR076734-01
University of Michigan BACPAC Mechanistic Research Center Clinical Research in Pain Management Back Pain Consortium Research Program NIAMS UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN AT ANN ARBOR CLAUW, DANIEL J (contact); HASSETT, AFTON L Ann Arbor, MI 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Back Pain Consortium (BACPAC) Research Program: Mechanistic Research Centers (U19 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-AR-19-026
Summary:

The University of Michigan (UM) will lead a Mechanistic Research Center (MRC) as part of the broader BACPAC initiative that will take patients with chronic low back pain (cLBP) and use a patient-centric, SMART design study to follow these individuals longitudinally as they try several different evidence-based therapies while mechanistic studies are overlaid to draw crucial inferences about what treatments will work in what patient endotypes. Interventional Response Phenotyping describes the need in any precision medicine initiative to phenotype participants based on what therapies they do and do not respond to so that one can later link mechanistically distinct disease endophenotypes with those who preferentially respond to therapies targeting those mechanisms.

1U01DK123813-01
UPENN Scientific and Data Research Center for the HOPE Consortium to Reduce Pain and Opioid Use in Hemodialysis Clinical Research in Pain Management Integrated Approach to Pain and Opioid Use in Hemodialysis Patients NIDDK UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA DEMBER, LAURA M (contact); FARRAR, JOHN T; KAMPMAN, KYLE MATTHEW; LANDIS, J RICHARD Philadelphia, PA 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Integrated Approach to Pain and Opioid Use in Hemodialysis Patients: The Hemodialysis Opioid Prescription Effort (HOPE) Consortium - Scientific and Data Research Center (U01 Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: RFA-DK-18-031
Summary:

The University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine serves as the Scientific and Data Research Center (SDRC) for the Hemodialysis Opioid Prescription Effort (HOPE) Consortium. Specifically, the SDRC will 1) provide scientific leadership for the HOPE Consortium clinical trial; 2) provide comprehensive operational support to the Clinical Centers for implementing the collaboratively designed trial protocol; 3) develop and lead a Stakeholder Engagement Working Group; 4) integrate and analyze data from the electronic health records of the participating Clinical Centers; 5) establish, promote, and maintain consortium-wide high standards for quality assurance and practices; 6) initiate and oversee contracts with industry partners; 7) prepare reports for the Data and Safety Monitoring Board, and support the preparation of Consortium reports of scientific findings; 8) prepare, document, and transfer Consortium data and biosamples to a Central Repository; and 9) develop approaches for disseminating the trial findings to diverse stakeholders.

1U24NS113850-01
Clinical Coordinating Center for the Health Initiative in Early Phase Pain Investigation Clinical Network Clinical Research in Pain Management Early Phase Pain Investigation Clinical Network (EPPIC-Net) NINDS MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL FAVA, MAURIZIO (contact); EDWARDS, ROBERT R; RATHMELL, JAMES P Boston, MA 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Early Phase Pain Investigation Clinical Network - Clinical Coordinating Center (U24 Clinical Trials Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: RFA-NS-19-023
Summary:

The objective of the Early Phase Pain Investigation Clinical Network (EPPIC-Net) and EPPIC- Net initiatives is to rapidly and efficiently translate advances in the neurobiology of pain into treatments for people with chronic and acute pain, conditions associated with a significant burden to both patients and society. The Clinical Coordinating Center (CCC) for EPPIC-Net will promote and facilitate, from initial conception through final analysis, clinical trials in adult and pediatric populations with acute or chronic pain by providing efficient methodological, organizational, and logistical support. The EPPIC-Net-CCC will adopt and establish processes aimed at dramatically increasing the efficiency of multicenter clinical trials, improving the overall quality of clinical trials, promoting patient recruitment and retention as well as increasing the number of clinical investigators and research staff well trained and passionate about leading and conducting multicenter clinical trials.

1U18EB029257-01
Temporal Patterns of Spinal Cord Stimulation Preclinical and Translational Research in Pain Management Translating Discoveries into Effective Devices to Treat Pain NIBIB DUKE UNIVERSITY GRILL, WARREN M Durham, NC 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Translational Development of Devices to Treat Pain (U18 Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: RFA-EB-18-003
Summary:

This project will design and test optimized temporal patterns of stimulation to improve the efficacy of commercially available spinal cord stimulation (SCS) systems to treat chronic neuropathic pain. Researchers will build upon a validated biophysical model of the effects of SCS on sensory signal processing in neurons within the dorsal horn of the spinal cord to better understand how to improve the electrical stimulus patterns applied to the spinal cord. They will use sensitivity analyses to determine the robustness of stimulation patterns to variations in electrode positioning, selectivity of stimulation, and biophysical properties of the dorsal horn neural network. Researchers will demonstrate improvements from these new stimulus patterns by 1) measuring their effects on pain-related behavioral outcomes in a rat model of chronic neuropathic pain and by 2) quantifying the effects of optimized temporal patterns on spinal cord neuron activity. The outcome will be mechanistically derived and validated stimulus patterns that are significantly more efficacious than the phenomenologically derived standard of care patterns; these patterns could be implemented with either a software update or minor hardware modifications to existing SCS products.

1R61NS113329-01
Discovery of Biomarker Signatures Prognostic for Neuropathic Pain after Acute Spinal Cord Injury Preclinical and Translational Research in Pain Management Discovery and Validation of Biomarkers, Endpoints, and Signatures for Pain Conditions NINDS UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS HLTH SCI CTR HOUSTON HERGENROEDER, GEORGENE W Houston, TX 2019
NOFO Title: Discovery of Biomarkers, Biomarker Signatures, and Endpoints for Pain (R61/R33 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-NS-18-041
Summary:

Debilitating neuropathic pain occurs in 40 percent to 70 percent of people who suffer from spinal cord injury (SCI). There are no distinguishing characteristics to identify who will develop neuropathic pain. The objective of this research is to develop a biomarker signature prognostic of SCI-induced neuropathic pain (NP). The aims of the project are to (1) identify autoantibodies in plasma samples from acute SCI patients to CNS autoantigens and determine the relationship between autoantibodies levels to the development of NP, (2) identify the autoantibody combination with maximal prognostic accuracy for the development of NP at six months after SCI, and (3) develop and optimize an assay to simultaneously measure several autoantibodies and independently validate the prognostic efficacy for NP using plasma samples collected prospectively. Establishing a panel will refine the prognostic value of these autoantibodies as biomarkers to detect who are vulnerable to NP and may be used to for development of nonaddictive pain therapeutics.

1U01DK123812-01
Pain Reduction and Opioid MedIcation Safety in ESRD (PROMISE) study Clinical Research in Pain Management Integrated Approach to Pain and Opioid Use in Hemodialysis Patients NIDDK UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH AT PITTSBURGH JHAMB, MANISHA (contact); LIEBSCHUTZ, JANE M; STEEL, JENNIFER L; YABES, JONATHAN G Pittsburgh, PA 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Integrated Approach to Pain and Opioid Use in Hemodialysis Patients: The Hemodialysis Opioid Prescription Effort (HOPE) Consortium - Clinical Centers (U01 Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: RFA-DK-18-030
Summary:

The Pain Reduction and Opioid Medication Safety in ESRD (PROMISE) study aims to improve the safety of opioid use and pain management in end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients on hemodialysis (HD) using a Type I effectiveness-implementation hybrid design. A multisite randomized controlled trial of HD patients from the Hemodialysis Opioid Prescription Effort (HOPE) Consortium will examine the effectiveness of two separate nine-month evidence-based interventions: 1) Opioid Tapering Management (OTM) and 2) Behavioral Pain Management (BPM). We will examine the effectiveness of OTM (versus no OTM, Aim 1) and BPM (versus no BPM) over nine months for reducing opioid use (primary outcome) and improving pain severity (secondary outcome) in HD patients on chronic opioids. The implementation goal will take advantage of the diverse patient, provider, and organizational settings in the HOPE Consortium to evaluate process outcomes.

3UG1CA189824-06S1
Implementing and Evaluating mHealth Pain Coping Skills Training Interventions to Improve Self-Management of Chronic Pain in Cancer Survivors in “Real World” Clinical Practice Setting Clinical Research in Pain Management Pain Management Effectiveness Research Network (ERN) NCI Wake Forest NCORP Research Base Lesser, Glenn Winston-Salem, NC 2019
NOFO Title: NCI Community Oncology Research Program (NCORP) Research Bases (UG1 Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: RFA-CA-18-015
Summary:

Pain Coping Skills Training (PCST) uses a cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) approach to teach patients cognitive and behavioral coping skills shown to reduce pain and pain interference (e.g., relaxation, distraction, cognitive restructuring, activity pacing). Randomized controlled trials show that PCST and similar CBT-based interventions, when delivered in a traditional in-person format, can improve pain and functioning in people with cancer and other conditions. Yet these interventions are underused in clinical care due to barriers such as high resource costs, a shortage of therapists trained to deliver them, and travel requirements for patients. This trial aims to deliver evidence-based behavioral pain interventions such as PCST with methods capable of overcoming barriers currently limiting patient access. This will be investigated using a two-arm trial comparing pain relief with the following interventions: painTRAINER in clinic with eight web-based follow-up sessions; enhanced usual care.

1R43NS113726-01
Pharmacokinetic and toxicology studies of AYX2, a transcription factor decoy, non-opioid, disease modifying drug candidate for the long-term treatment of chronic pain Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NINDS ADYNXX, INC. MAMET, JULIEN San Francisco, CA 2019
NOFO Title: PHS 2018-02 Omnibus Solicitation of the NIH, CDC, and FDA for Small Business Innovation Research Grant Applications (Parent SBIR [R43/R44] Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: PA-18-574
Summary:

Chronic focal neuropathic pain, which includes pain etiologies such as radiculopathy and radiculitis, focal peripheral neuropathies, and low back pain, affects as many as 25 million patients annually in the United States. Chronic focal neuropathic pain is maintained by genome-wide transcription regulation in the dorsal root ganglia (DRG) / spinal cord network. The transcription factors driving this regulation constitute a promising class of targets with the potential to alter the course of pain with a single treatment. DNA decoys are oligonucleotides that specifically inhibit the activity of certain transcription factors. AYX2 binds and inhibits Krüppel-like transcription factors (KLF) in the DRG-spinal cord. The goal of this Phase 1 proposal is to advance AYX2 toward an IND submission, allowing for human clinical trials. We propose in Aim 1 to characterize AYX2 pharmacokinetics in the cerebrospinal fluid and plasma and its distribution in the DRG, spinal cord and brain following an IT injection. With this information, AYX2 will be tested in a panel of complementary toxicology studies in Aim 2 to allow for final IND-enabling studies, supported by Phase 2 of the grant. This research will accelerate development of AYX2 as a novel drug candidate for the non-opioid treatment of pain.

1U01DK123786-01
Randomized ESRD Trial COmparing CBT alone VERsus with buprenorphine (RECOVER) Clinical Research in Pain Management Integrated Approach to Pain and Opioid Use in Hemodialysis Patients NIDDK UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON MEHROTRA, RAJNISH (contact); CUKOR, DANIEL ; UNRUH, MARK LYNN Seattle, WA 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Integrated Approach to Pain and Opioid Use in Hemodialysis Patients: The Hemodialysis Opioid Prescription Effort (HOPE) Consortium - Clinical Centers (U01 Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: RFA-DK-18-030
Summary:

For patients with end-stage renal disease treated with long-term hemodialysis (HD), the safety and efficacy of behavioral interventions alone or augmented by safer drugs remain untested. This study will perform a multicenter parallel group randomized controlled trial to test the efficacy of two interventions to reduce opioid use in HD patients. Seven hundred and twenty HD patients with significant and ongoing opioid use will be randomly assigned to (1) telehealth cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) alone, (2) telehealth CBT augmented by transdermal buprenorphine, and (3) usual care, with follow-up for up to one year. The primary outcome will be prescribed morphine milligram equivalent (MME) over the preceding four weeks. Three patient-reported outcomes (interference by pain, functional status, and quality of life) will comprise the secondary outcomes.

1R43NS115294-01
Developing EXP-1801 as an imaging agent to quantify pain and analgesia Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NINDS EXPESICOR, INC. NORWOOD, BRAXTON Kalispell, MT 2019
NOFO Title: PHS 2018-02 Omnibus Solicitation of the NIH, CDC, and FDA for Small Business Innovation Research Grant Applications (Parent SBIR [R43/R44] Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: PA-18-574
Summary:

The use of a pain imaging technology would allow for objective efficacy data (both pre-clinically and in clinical trials), and reduce costs by enabling smaller sample sizes due to more homogeneous populations; i.e. with a particular “pain signal,” and more accurate measurement of analgesic effects. This research team recently invented a novel positron emission tomography (PET) imaging agent as a tool to address these issues in pain care and therapy development. Although the ability of PET to detect pathological changes for (early) disease detection is widely used in cancer and neurological diseases, it has not yet been used for pain indications. The goals of this project are: 1) to change the evaluation of (experimental) pain therapies, and 2) the standard of care in pain assessment through molecular imaging. The proposed study is designed to determine the feasibility of our imaging agent to objectively measure pain in rodents. This will set the stage for a Phase II study that further develops this agent into a tool for quantifying pain/analgesia.

1UH2AR076736-01
Focused Ultrasound Neuromodulation of Dorsal Root Ganglion for Noninvasive Mitigation of Low Back Pain Clinical Research in Pain Management Back Pain Consortium Research Program NIAMS UNIVERSITY OF UTAH RIEKE, VIOLA (contact); SHAH, LUBDHA Salt Lake City, UT 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Back Pain Consortium (BACPAC) Research Program Technology Research Sites (UH2/UH3 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-AR-19-028
Summary:

This project's goal is to develop a completely noninvasive, precise, and durable treatment option for low back pain (LBP). Focused ultrasound (FUS) is a lower-risk, completely noninvasive modality that enables the delivery of spatially confined acoustic energy to a small tissue region (dorsal root ganglion [DRG]) under magnetic resonance (MR) imaging guidance to treat axial low back pain by neuromodulation. The central goal of this study is to demonstrate neuromodulation of the DRG with FUS to decrease nerve conduction; this treatment can be used to attenuate pain sensation. This exploratory study will demonstrate FUS neuromodulation of the DRG in pigs as assessed by somatosensory evoked potential and perform unique behavioral assessments indicative of supraspinal pain sensation, with the ultimate goal of translating this technology to patients with LBP. FUS could potentially replace current invasive or systemically detrimental treatment modalities.

1R01NS113257-01
Discovery and validation of a novel orphan GPCR as a target for therapeutic intervention in neuropathic pain Preclinical and Translational Research in Pain Management Discovery and Validation of Novel Targets for Safe and Effective Treatment of Pain NINDS St. Louis University SALVEMINI, DANIELA St. Louis, MO 2019
NOFO Title: Discovery and Validation of Novel Targets for Safe and Effective Pain Treatment (R01 Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: RFA-NS-18-043
Summary:

Neuropathic pain conditions are exceedingly difficult to treat, and novel non-opioid analgesics are desperately needed. Receptomic and unbiased transcriptomic approaches recently identified the orphan G-protein coupled receptor (oGPCR), GPR160, as a major oGPCR whose transcript is significantly increased in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord (DH-SC) ipsilateral to nerve injury, in a model of traumatic nerve-injury induced neuropathic pain caused by constriction of the sciatic nerve in rats (CCI). De-orphanization of GPR160 led to the identification of cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcript peptide (CARTp) as a ligand which activates pathways crucial to persistent pain sensitization. This project will test the hypothesis that CARTp/GPR160 signaling in the spinal cord is essential for the development and maintenance of neuropathic pain states. It will also validate GPR160 as a non-opioid receptor target for therapeutic intervention in neuropathic pain, and characterize GPR160 coupling and downstream molecular signaling pathways underlying chronic neuropathic pain.

1R61NS114926-01
SPRINT: Signature for Pain Recovery IN Teens Preclinical and Translational Research in Pain Management Discovery and Validation of Biomarkers, Endpoints, and Signatures for Pain Conditions NINDS STANFORD UNIVERSITY SIMONS, LAURA E Stanford, CA 2019
NOFO Title: Discovery of Biomarkers, Biomarker Signatures, and Endpoints for Pain (R61/R33 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-NS-18-041
Summary:

Up to 5 percent of adolescents suffer from high-impact chronic musculoskeletal (MSK) pain, and only about 50 percent with chronic MSK pain who present for treatment recover. Current treatments for chronic MSK pain are suboptimal and have been tied to the opioid crisis. Discovery of robust markers of the recovery versus persistence of pain and disability is essential to develop more resourceful and patient-specific treatment strategies, requiring measurements across multiple dimensions in the same patient cohort in combination with a suitable computational analysis pipeline. Preliminary data has implicated novel candidates for neuroimaging, immune, quantitative sensory, and psychological markers for discovery. In addition, a standardized specimen collection, processing, storage, and distribution system is in place, along with expertise in machine learning approaches to extract reliable and prognostic bio-signatures from a large and complex data set. This project will facilitate risk stratification and a resourceful selection of patients who are likely to respond to current multidisciplinary pain treatment approaches.

1R43AR074369-01
Development of a fixed-dose combination therapy for the treatment of chronic musculoskeletal pain Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIAMS NEUROCYCLE THERAPEUTICS, INC. TOCZKO, MATTHEW ALEXANDER Sheridan, WY 2019
NOFO Title: PHS 2017-02 Omnibus Solicitation of the NIH, CDC, and FDA for Small Business Innovation Research Grant Applications (Parent SBIR [R43/R44])
NOFO Number: PA-17-302
Summary:

Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are a first line pharmacologic pain therapy for chronic musculoskeletal pain, and rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and moderate to severe osteoarthritis (OA) specifically. However, insufficient pain relief by NSAID monotherapy has encouraged the use of combination therapy. Combinations of NSAIDs plus weak opioids are widely used although objective evidence for efficacy is limited and they have many adverse events.  A growing body of evidence suggests that ?2/?3 subtype-selective positive allosteric modulators (PAM) of the ?- aminobutyric acid A receptor (GABAAR) may effectively restore central pain regulatory mechanisms thus providing effective relief of chronic pain with reduced prevalence and severity of side-effects.  Based on these promising preliminary studies and considerable supporting literature data, the research team will test the hypothesis that combination dosing of TPA-023B with an NSAID will work synergistically to suppress the acute and chronic pain components of chronic musculoskeletal pain. 

1R01DE029342-01
Identification and Validation of a Novel Central Analgesia Circuit Preclinical and Translational Research in Pain Management Discovery and Validation of Novel Targets for Safe and Effective Treatment of Pain NIDCR DUKE UNIVERSITY WANG, FAN Durham, NC 2019
NOFO Title: Discovery and Validation of Novel Targets for Safe and Effective Pain Treatment (R01 Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: RFA-NS-18-043
Summary:

This project focuses on identifying and validating a new central analgesic circuit in the brain, based on a highly innovative hypothesis that the strong analgesic effects of general anesthesia (GA) are in part carried out by GA-mediated activation of the endogenous analgesic circuits. Preliminary discovery studies found that a subset of GABAergic neurons located in the central amygdala (CeA) become strongly activated and express high levels of the immediate early gene Fos under GA (hereafter referred to as CeAGA neurons). Furthermore, activation of these neurons exert profound pain-suppressing effects in an acute pain model and a chronic orofacial neuropathic pain model in mice. Based on these exciting preliminary findings, this project will identify and validate CeAGA neurons’ analgesic functions utilizing multiple mouse pain models. Identification of these shared common pathways that need to be suppressed by specific subtypes of CeAGA analgesic neurons will be highly critical for developing precise CeAGA-targeted therapies to treat chronic pain.

1R01NS113243-01
Targeting sensory ganglia and glial signaling for the treatment of acute and chronic pain Preclinical and Translational Research in Pain Management Discovery and Validation of Novel Targets for Safe and Effective Treatment of Pain NINDS UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI BERTA, TEMUGIN Cincinnati, OH 2019
NOFO Title: Discovery and Validation of Novel Targets for Safe and Effective Pain Treatment (R01 Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: RFA-NS-18-043
Summary:

There is increasing evidence that satellite glial cells (SGCs) surrounding neurons in the dorsal root ganglia modulate sensory processing and are important for chronic pain. Tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 3 (TIMP3) signaling occurs in SGCs and has unique plethoric functions in inhibiting matrix metalloproteinases, the tumor necrosis factor-?-converting enzyme, and the vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2, all of which have been implicated in inflammation and pain. This study will test the hypothesis that expression of TIMP3 in SGCs is critical for the neuroimmune homeostasis in sensory ganglia, as well as for the development of pain, and therefore could be a novel therapeutic target for acute and chronic pain. Given the expression of TIMP3 in human SGCs and the strong validation of multiple small molecules targeting TIMP3 signaling, including FDA-approved drugs, in various animal models of pain and in cultured human SGCs, the successful completion of this research project has a high likelihood of rapid translation into therapeutic testing in inflammatory pain conditions that are a risk for opioid abuse.

3R01MD009063-05S1
ETHNIC DIFFERENCES IN ENDOGENOUS PAIN REGULATION: PET IMAGING OF OPIOID RECEPTORS Clinical Research in Pain Management NIMHD Johns Hopkins University CAMPBELL, CLAUDIA MICHELLE Baltimore, MD 2018
NOFO Title: Administrative Supplements to Existing NIH Grants and Cooperative Agreements (Parent Admin Supp Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: PA-18-591
Summary:

Ethnic groups show substantial variability in the experience of acute and clinical pain, with African Americans (AAs) having more clinical pain conditions and higher levels of pain severity and pain-related disability compared to non-Hispanic whites (NHW). Ethnic differences in opioid neurotransmitters suggest that these systems function less efficiently among AAs and may account for differences in pain and analgesic responses. The overwhelming majority of clinically used opioids elicit their effects through activation of the mu-opioid receptor, making it a relevant target for investigation. We propose to examine ethnic differences in the supraspinal endogenous opioid system using positron emission tomography (PET) imaging of mu-opioid receptors employing the mu-selective agonist [11C]carfentanil. Healthy AAs and sex-, age-, SES-matched NHW participants will undergo one baseline (non-pain) and one capsaicin-induced pain PET session using [11C]carfentanil. The current proposal will measure µ-opioid binding potential and examine its role in ethnic group differences in pain sensitivity.

3R21MD011767-02S1
SUPPLEMENT TO OPIOID PRESCRIBING DISPARITIES IN A PUBLIC HEALTH CRISIS Clinical Research in Pain Management NIMHD Research at Nationwide Children's - Nationwide Children's Hospital CHISOLM, DEENA; DEANS, KATHERINE J Columbus, OH 2018
NOFO Title: Administrative Supplements to Existing NIH Grants and Cooperative Agreements (Parent Admin Supp Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: PA-18-591
Summary:

African American adults are less likely to receive analgesics, particularly opioids. Research in the pediatric surgical population is limited, but the pattern of disparate use of opioids appears consistent with adults. Furthermore, adolescent access to prescribed opioids has increased, both through physician prescribing and misuse of medications prescribed to family members or friends. This study will explore the interrelated impacts of policy, clinical need, and sociodemographic factors by combining Medicaid claims and electronic health record data with findings from a statewide opioid policy inventory. We will focus on discharge prescribing of opioids in three high-volume pediatric surgical procedures: tonsillectomy/adenoidectomy, supracondylar fracture, and appendectomy. We aim to 1) determine the extent of racial disparities in postoperative discharge opioid prescribing since the 2011 onset of enhanced opioid prescription reduction activities and 2) develop an expanded model to assess the linkage between differential opioid use for pediatric postoperative pain and opioid use-related outcomes.

1UG3AR076387-01
Fibromyalgia TENS in Physical Therapy Study (TIPS): An embedded pragmatic clinical trial Clinical Research in Pain Management Pragmatic and Implementation Studies for the Management of Pain to Reduce Opioid Prescribing (PRISM) NIAMS UNIVERSITY OF IOWA SLUKA, KATHLEEN A (contact); CROFFORD, LESLIE J Iowa City, IA 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Pragmatic and Implementation Studies for the Management of Pain to Reduce Opioid Prescribing (PRISM)(UG3/UH3 Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: RFA-AT-19-004
Summary:

Fibromyalgia (FM) is a chronic pain condition characterized by widespread musculoskeletal pain, tenderness, and stiffness associated with fatigue and sleep disturbance. The investigators have recently completed a trial that demonstrated efficacy of active transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) compared with placebo TENS or no treatment in women with FM. While physical therapists are trained in using TENS, it is underused in clinical practice. This application proposes a pragmatic clinical trial of TENS for patients with FM to determine if the addition of TENS to physical therapy (PT) reduces pain, increases PT adherence, and helps achieve functional goals with less drug use. This study will address the critical need for strategies to implement effective nonpharmacologic treatments for FM. Successful completion of this trial will provide generalizable effectiveness data for referring providers, physical therapists, and insurers and will inform future pragmatic trials of nonpharmacologic treatments conducted in PT practices.

3R01NS097880-02S1
VALIDATION OF TARGETING MACROPHAGE-MEDIATED EVENTS IN THE DRG TO ALLEVIATE CHRONIC SPINAL CORD INJURY PAIN Preclinical and Translational Research in Pain Management Discovery and Validation of Novel Targets for Safe and Effective Treatment of Pain NINDS DREXEL UNIVERSITY DETLOFF, MEGAN R PHILADELPHIA, PA 2019
NOFO Title: Administrative Supplements to Existing NIH Grants and Cooperative Agreements (Parent Admin Supp Clinical Trial Optional)
NOFO Number: PA-18-591
Summary:

Spinal cord injury (SCI) impairs sensory transmission and leads to chronic, debilitating neuropathic pain. While our understanding of the development of chronic pain has improved, the available therapeutics provide limited relief. We will examine the peripheral immune and inflammatory response. Secondary inflammation in response to SCI is a series of temporally ordered events: an acute, transient upregulation of chemokines, followed by the recruitment of monocytes/macrophages and generation of an inflammatory environment at the lesion site in the spinal cord, but also surrounding primary nociceptors in the dorsal root ganglia (DRG). These events precede neuropathic pain development. Previous work indicates that after SCI, macrophage presence in the DRG correlates with neuropathic pain. We propose to study: 1) whether the phenotype of macrophages that infiltrate the DRG is different than those that persist chronically after SCI and 2) how manipulation of macrophage phenotype affects nociceptor activity and pain development.

1R43DE029379-01
Therapeutic in Situ Analgesic Implant for improved Oral-Facial Post-Operative Pain Outcomes Cross-Cutting Research Small Business Programs NIDCR EPIGEN BIOSCIENCES, INC. FRIEDMAN, CRAIG; CAUDLE, ROBERT M San Diego, CA 2019
NOFO Title: PHS 2018-02 Omnibus Solicitation of the NIH, CDC, and FDA for Small Business Innovation Research Grant Applications (Parent SBIR [R43/R44] Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: PA-18-574
Summary:

Analgesia for post-operative populations remains a significant health need that calls for innovative therapies which improve both safety and outcome measures. Recent FDA drug safety warnings and studies focusing on post-operative analgesia have highlighted the imperative need for new approaches that can be utilized for common clinical scenarios. Accordingly, novel treatment options that are safe and afford additional benefit in relief of pain are needed. In this proposal, the development of an innovative surgical sealant technology is proposed that functions at the level of the surgical wound bed and actively delivers local pharmacologic agents to therapeutically address post-operative pain. New formulations of several analgesic regimens will be assessed for their ability to seal wounds and provide appropriate pain management.

3U24TR001609-04S1
TIN Supplement Clinical Research in Pain Management Pain Management Effectiveness Research Network (ERN) NCATS Johns Hopkins University Hanley, Daniel Baltimore, MD 2019
NOFO Title: CTSA Network - Trial Innovation Centers (TICs) (U24)
NOFO Number: RFA-TR-15-002
1UG3TR003081-01
Multi-organ human-on-a-chip system to address overdose and acute and chronic efficacy and off-target toxicity Preclinical and Translational Research in Pain Management Translational Research to Advance Testing of Novel Drugs and Human Cell-Based Screening Platforms to Treat Pain and Opioid Use Disorder NCATS UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL FLORIDA HICKMAN, JAMES J (contact); SHULER, MICHAEL L Orlando, FL 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Tissue Chips to Model Nociception, Addiction, and Overdose (UG3/UH3 Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: RFA-TR-19-003
Summary:

This project will build overdose models for fentanyl, methadone, codeine, and morphine in a multi-organ system and evaluate the acute and repeat dose, or chronic effects, of overdose treatments as well as off-target toxicity. Researchers developed a system using human cells in a pumpless multi-organ platform that allows continuous recirculation of a blood surrogate for up to 28 days. They will develop two overdose models for male and female phenotypes based on pre-B?tzinger Complex neurons and will integrate functional immune components that enable organ-specific or systemic monocyte actuation. Models for cardiomyopathy and infection will be utilized. Researchers will establish a pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic model of overdose and treatment to enable prediction for a range of variables. We will use a serum-free medium with microelectrode arrays and cantilever systems integrated on chip that allow noninvasive electronic and mechanical readouts of organ function.

1U01DK123818-01
Reducing Chronic Pain and Opioid Use in Hemodialysis Patients Clinical Research in Pain Management Integrated Approach to Pain and Opioid Use in Hemodialysis Patients NIDDK MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL KALIM, SAHIR (contact); NIGWEKAR, SAGAR Boston, MA 2019
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Integrated Approach to Pain and Opioid Use in Hemodialysis Patients: The Hemodialysis Opioid Prescription Effort (HOPE) Consortium - Clinical Centers (U01 Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: RFA-DK-18-030
Summary:

Because pain is a multidimensional phenomenon with physical and psychosocial components, a pain management approach relying solely on analgesics is unlikely to be efficacious. Nonpharmacologic therapies for co-occurring chronic pain and opioid use in hemodialysis patients should target and alter cognitive-affective circuits that govern responses elicited by pain, stress, mood disorders, and opioid-related cues. These domains are directly addressed through the behavioral therapy program known as MORE (Mindfulness-Oriented Recovery Enhancement)—a multipronged mindfulness-oriented individualized group therapy that integrates mindfulness training, cognitive reappraisal, and enhancement of natural reward processing. The specific aims are 1) to determine the impact of MORE on chronic pain and opioid use in hemodialysis patients and 2) to determine predictors of chronic pain, opioid use, and response to MORE.