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 Sort descending |
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3U24NS112873-03S2
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Clinical Coordinating Center for the Acute to Chronic Pain Signatures Program: Administrative Supplement | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Acute to Chronic Pain Signatures Program | NINDS | UNIVERSITY OF IOWA | SLUKA, KATHLEEN A | Iowa City, IA | 2021 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest to Encourage Eligible NIH HEAL Initiative Awardees to Apply for Administrative Supplements to Support Career Enhancement Related to Clinical Research on Pain (Admin Supp – Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: NOT-NS-21-048 Summary: The Acute to Chronic Pain Signatures (A2CPS) Program aims to identify combinations of biomarkers that predict susceptibility or resilience to the development of chronic pain. This career enhancement award will help a promising postdoctoral trainee gain access to tools and develop skills needed to pursue a career in clinical pain research. The research involves conducting collaborative multi-site cohort studies and analyzing A2CPS data to determine if a combination of metabolic and psychosocial biomarkers can be used to explain pre-surgery differences in pain, function, and disability in patients with severe knee osteoarthritis. |
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1K24NS126861-01
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Promoting high-quality chronic pain treatment trials through mentorship of junior investigators: A focus on study conduct and method development | Clinical Research in Pain Management | NINDS | UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER | Gewandter, Jennifer | Rochester, NY | 2021 | |
NOFO Title: Midcareer Investigator Award in Patient-Oriented Research (Parent K24 Independent Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: PA-20-193 Summary: Enhancing the workforce of pain investigators and practitioners is a key goal of the NIH HEAL Initiative. This mentoring award leverages the resources at one of EPPIC-Net’s Specialized Clinical Centers to encourage interest in clinical pain management, in particular through multidisciplinary pain research projects. A selected investigator will train early career clinical researchers on how to develop and validate relevant pain measures and outcomes in chronic pain conditions, including chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy and neuropathic chronic low back pain. Mentoring activities will include formal research and analysis, active inclusion in EPPIC-Net working groups, and collaborative writing experiences. |
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3U24NS113784-01S1
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University of Rochester Hub and Spokes for the EPPIC Network - Specialized Clinical Center | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Early Phase Pain Investigation Clinical Network (EPPIC-Net) | NINDS | UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER | MARKMAN, JOHN DOUGLAS | Rochester, NY | 2021 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest to Encourage Eligible NIH HEAL Initiative Awardees to Apply for Administrative Supplements to Support Career Enhancement Related to Clinical Research on Pain (Admin Supp – Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: NOT-NS-21-048 Summary: Improving pain treatment for is a major goal of the NIH HEAL Initiative. This award supports an early career physician toward achieving a future in clinical pain research and in conducting phase II clinical trials focused on pain. Research activities will provide this individual with the skills needed to serve as a primary investigator for future clinical trials in chronic pain and will help to answer a key question that could improve the design of analgesic clinical trials for neurogenic intermittent claudication, a distinct form of chronic low back pain for which no available treatment exists. |
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1K24NS126781-01
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Mentoring in discovery and validation of clinical chronic pain biomarkers | Clinical Research in Pain Management | NINDS | STANFORD UNIVERSITY | Mackey, Sean C | Stanford, CA | 2021 | |
NOFO Title: Midcareer Investigator Award in Patient-Oriented Research (Parent K24 Independent Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: PA-20-193 Summary: Enhancing the workforce of pain investigators and practitioners is a key goal of the NIH HEAL Initiative. This mentoring award will allow a selected investigator to train early career investigators in patient-oriented research focusing on the development of diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers for high-impact chronic pain. Mentoring activities will include training in designing and implementing pain research studies, preparing scientific papers and presentations, writing successful grant applications, the responsible conduct of research, and successful navigation of the academic process to achieve scientific independence. This training will allow mentees to advance their independent careers as pain researchers. |
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3U19AR076725-01S2
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HEALing LB3P: Profiling Biomechanical, Biological and Behavioral phenotypes | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Back Pain Consortium Research Program | NIAMS | UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH AT PITTSBURGH | SOWA, GWENDOLYN A | Pittsburgh, PA | 2021 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest to Encourage Eligible NIH HEAL Initiative Awardees to Apply for Administrative Supplements to Support Career Enhancement Related to Clinical Research on Pain (Admin Supp – Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: NOT-NS-21-048 Summary: Identifying optimal chronic low back pain treatments on a patient-specific basis is an important and unresolved challenge. Tailoring interventions according to patient movement characteristics is one option. This research is characterizing patients based on spinal motion during functional tasks and daily activities and will use artificial intelligence to objectively characterize motions of the spine during both clinical assessments and day-to-day life. During clinical assessments, participants will be asked to perform functional tasks while wearing motion sensors. Data collected from the sensors will be used to identify tasks of interest, such as activities of daily living and aberrant/painful motions. An artificial intelligence approach will then interpret data collected continuously during assessment in patients’ homes over a 7-day testing period. Ultimately, this data could be used to help clinicians tailor treatments that are responsive to a patient’s real-world functional impairments. |
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1K24AR081143-01
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Mentorship of Junior Investigators on HEAL-SKOAP | Clinical Research in Pain Management | NIAMS | JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY | Campbell, Claudia Michelle | Baltimore, MD | 2021 | |
NOFO Title: Midcareer Investigator Award in Patient-Oriented Research (Parent K24 Independent Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: PA-20-193 Summary: The HEAL-funded Sequenced-strategy for Improving Outcomes in People with Knee Osteoarthritis Pain (SKOAP) clinical trial evaluates behavioral, pharmacologic, and procedural interventions for patients with knee osteoarthritis pain. It is designed to mimic clinical care for these patients by first testing the effectiveness of conservative and nonsurgical interventions before considering surgical interventions. It is a large-scale clinical trial with a novel design that evaluates multidisciplinary treatments. Therefore, it offers a unique training opportunity for junior investigators from various disciplines who are interested in pain research and management. This mentoring award will allow a selected investigator to train junior investigators by providing protected, mentorship-focused time. |
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3U19AR076734-01S3
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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 | Ann Arbor, MI | 2021 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest to Encourage Eligible NIH HEAL Initiative Awardees to Apply for Administrative Supplements to Support Career Enhancement Related to Clinical Research on Pain (Admin Supp – Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: NOT-NS-21-048 Summary: There are numerous pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions for chronic low back pain, yet no treatment is universally effective. This award supports an early career physician to develop skills to prepare for a career in clinical pain research in an environment aiming to understand patient characteristics that predict differential responses to pain interventions and thus allow for tailored treatments. This research assesses the impact of mindfulness-based stress reduction on pain interference reported by people with chronic low back pain and explores neurobiological effects of mindfulness-based stress reduction through advanced imaging and clinical assessments. |
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1K24AT011995-01
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Providing training in effective non-opioid options for the treatment of pain conditions | Clinical Research in Pain Management | NCCIH | UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT CHICAGO | Doorenbos, Ardith Z | Chicago, IL | 2021 | |
NOFO Title: Midcareer Investigator Award in Patient-Oriented Research (Parent K24 Independent Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: PA-20-193 Summary: Over-the-counter medicines such as non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs are ineffective for treating severe chronic pain and may have serious side effects from continued use, which limits treatment options. A kinase (an enzyme whose activity targets a specific molecule) called TAK1 is involved in the chronic pain process. This research will develop a molecule previously shown to be effective in a model of inflammatory pain that also inhibits TAK1. A main goal will be to determine if this inhibitor (takinib analog HS-276) can cross the blood-brain barrier and, if successful, pursue FDA Investigative New Drug-enabling safety studies leading to a Phase I clinical trial and a potential new chronic pain treatment. |
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3U19AR076734-01S4
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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 | Ann Arbor, MI | 2021 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Notice of Special Interest (NOSI) regarding the Availability of Administrative Supplements to Support Strategies to Increase Participant Diversity, Inclusion and Engagement in Clinical Studies
NOFO Number: NOT-NS-21-025 Summary: Chronic overlapping pain conditions represent up to half of all chronic pain cases and can be more debilitating than other forms of chronic pain. These conditions include but are not limited to the following: temporomandibular disorders, fibromyalgia, irritable bowel syndrome, vulvodynia, interstitial cystitis/painful bladder syndrome, painful endometriosis, chronic tension type headache, migraine headache, chronic low back pain, and chronic fatigue syndrome. Common neurobiological mechanisms have been suspected to account for the overlap between these conditions, but until recently it has been difficult to efficiently classify each condition within individual patients. A digital classification tool for clinicians has been developed for this purpose, but access to the tool remains limited. Here we propose converting this chronic overlapping pain conditions classification tool into a common web-based application format. |
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1R61AT012283-01
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Development and Identification of Magnetic Resonance, Electrophysiological, and Fiber-Optic Imaging Biomarkers of Myofascial Pain | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Discovery and Validation of Biomarkers, Endpoints, and Signatures for Pain Conditions | NCCIH | WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY | HU, SONG (contact); WANG, YONG | St. Louis, MO | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Developing Quantitative Imaging and Other Relevant Biomarkers of Myofascial Tissues for Clinical Pain Management
NOFO Number: RFA-AT-22-003 Summary: Pain in muscles and surrounding connective tissue (myofascial pain) is a significant health concern affecting hundreds of millions of Americans. There is no objective way to identify and measure myofascial pain. This project will address this unmet challenge by developing a robust approach to identify imaging biomarker(s) that can distinguish different states of myofascial pain. The research will then examine the ability of identified biomarker(s) to predict patient responses to a myofascial pain treatment in a randomized controlled clinical trial. |
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1R61AT012282-01
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Development and Validation of a Multimodal Ultrasound-Based Biomarker for Myofascial Pain | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Discovery and Validation of Biomarkers, Endpoints, and Signatures for Pain Conditions | NCCIH | UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH AT PITTSBURGH | WASAN, AJAY D (contact); KIM, KANG ; PU, JIANTAO | Pittsburgh, PA | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Developing Quantitative Imaging and Other Relevant Biomarkers of Myofascial Tissues for Clinical Pain Management
NOFO Number: RFA-AT-22-003 Summary: Pain in the muscles and surrounding connective tissues (myofascial pain) can affect many regions of the body and is a key component of chronic low back pain. Patients with chronic low back pain have a range of musculoskeletal problems perpetuating their pain. There is a significant clinical need to identify the components of myofascial pain in people with chronic low back pain. Advances in ultrasound technology have allowed researchers to identify several differences in muscle and connective tissues related to myofascial pain. This project will develop and validate an ultrasound-based biomarker signature for myofascial pain in the low back. This research will also refine the biomarker signature using advanced machine learning approaches, toward future testing in in a randomized controlled clinical trial. |
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1R61AT012185-01
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MRI-Based Quantitative Characterization of Impaired Myofascial Interface Properties in Myofascial Pain Syndrome | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Discovery and Validation of Biomarkers, Endpoints, and Signatures for Pain Conditions | NCCIH | MAYO CLINIC ROCHESTER | YIN, ZIYING (contact); BAUER, BRENT A | Rochester, MN | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Developing Quantitative Imaging and Other Relevant Biomarkers of Myofascial Tissues for Clinical Pain Management
NOFO Number: RFA-AT-22-003 Summary: Pain in the muscles and surrounding connective tissue (myofascial pain) is a significant health concern affecting hundreds of millions of Americans. Understanding and managing myofascial pain has been limited due to a lack of tools to help clinicians diagnose and treat this disorder. While past efforts to understand myofascial pain have focused on impairments in how connective tissues connect to other tissues in the body, this project will use a new imaging technique to study myofascial tissue physical properties, including how they move in the body and their structural stiffness. This research will identify an imaging biomarker to be used in a randomized controlled clinical trial to predict patient responses to a myofascial pain treatment. |
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1R61AT012279-01
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Quantifying and Treating Myofascial Dysfunction in Post Stroke Shoulder Pain | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Discovery and Validation of Biomarkers, Endpoints, and Signatures for Pain Conditions | NCCIH | JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY | RAGHAVAN, PREETI | Baltimore, MD | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Developing Quantitative Imaging and Other Relevant Biomarkers of Myofascial Tissues for Clinical Pain Management
NOFO Number: RFA-AT-22-003 Summary: Shoulder pain occurs in many patients who are recovering from a stroke. In addition to impairments in the ability to move, persistent shoulder pain contributes to depression, and often reduces quality of life. Although the cause of post-stroke shoulder pain is complex and not completely understood, it is thought to arise in part to damage of muscles and surrounding connective tissues (myofascial tissues) in the shoulder. This project will use advanced medical imaging techniques to create biomarkers of that can reliably identify myofascial tissues. The research will then test the ability of these biomarkers to monitor, and ultimately predict treatment responses in patients with post-stroke shoulder pain in the context of a randomized controlled clinical trial. |
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1R61AT012286-01
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Multimodal Imaging Biomarkers for Investigating Fascia, Muscle, and Vasculature in Myofascial Pain | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Discovery and Validation of Biomarkers, Endpoints, and Signatures for Pain Conditions | NCCIH | GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY | SIKDAR, SIDDHARTHA | Fairfax, VA | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Developing Quantitative Imaging and Other Relevant Biomarkers of Myofascial Tissues for Clinical Pain Management
NOFO Number: RFA-AT-22-003 Summary: Pain in the muscles and surrounding connective tissue (myofascial pain) is a significant health concern affecting hundreds of millions of Americans. Myofascial pain is primarily diagnosed by asking people about their amount of pain as well as through a physical examination. Both approaches are imprecise ways to diagnose the specific type of pain a patient is experiencing and what is causing it. This project aims to improve myofascial pain management and treatment by developing ways to measure changes to soft tissues (e.g., muscle, connective tissues, nerves, blood vessels) in people with myofascial pain compared with soft tissues in people who are not in pain. The project will develop an imaging biomarker that can distinguish healthy and diseased soft tissues that may contribute to myofascial pain syndrome. The project will then test the ability of these biomarkers to predict patient outcomes in a randomized controlled clinical trial. |
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1R61AT012284-01
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Electrophysiological and Ultrasound Quantitative Biomarkers for Myofascial Pain | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Discovery and Validation of Biomarkers, Endpoints, and Signatures for Pain Conditions | NCCIH | BETH ISRAEL DEACONESS MEDICAL CENTER | RUTKOVE, SEWARD B (contact); WAINGER, BRIAN JASON | Boston, MA | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Developing Quantitative Imaging and Other Relevant Biomarkers of Myofascial Tissues for Clinical Pain Management
NOFO Number: RFA-AT-22-003 Summary: Pain in the muscles and surrounding connective tissue (myofascial pain) is a significant and poorly understood health concern affecting hundreds of millions of Americans. There is a great need for tools to assess changes to myofascial tissues in individuals with chronic pain as well as to measure the effect of commonly used therapies. This project will use three imaging tools to look at differences between shoulder tissue in people with myofascial pain compared to those without pain. Using a machine learning approach, this research aims to develop a biomarker signature for myofascial pain, which will be evaluated in a randomized controlled clinical trial based on its ability to predict patient responses to myofascial pain treatments. |
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1R61AT012421-01
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Integrative Training Program for Pediatric Sickle Cell Pain | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Advancing Health Equity in Pain Management | NCCIH | EMORY UNIVERSITY | SIL, SOUMITRI | Atlanta, GA | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Advancing Health Equity in Pain and Comorbidities (R61/R33 Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: RFA-NS-22-037 Summary: Sickle cell disease is an inherited blood disorder affecting about 100,000 Americans and more than 20 million people worldwide. It is caused by a mutation in the gene for beta-globin that results in the characteristic sickled shape of red blood cells, life-long severe pain, and shortened lifespan. Optimal treatment of chronic pain from the condition targets psychological factors contributing to pain, such as pain-related anxiety, fear of movement, and depression. This project will interact with patients and their families to revise and test an existing mind–body and behavioral health treatment tool to target the unique needs and preferences of people managing chronic sickle cell disease pain. |
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1R61CA280978-01
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Culturally Adapted Mobile Treatment of Chronic Pain in Adolescent Survivors of Pediatric Bone Sarcoma | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Advancing Health Equity in Pain Management | NCI | ST. JUDE CHILDREN'S RESEARCH HOSPITAL | BRINKMAN, TARA M | Memphis, TN | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Advancing Health Equity in Pain and Comorbidities (R61/R33 Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: RFA-NS-22-037 Summary: More than half of children and adolescents diagnosed with a type of cancer called bone sarcoma experience pain that interferes with daily life. This project will adapt an evidence-based cognitive behavioral therapy mobile app for use with Black and Hispanic adolescents who disproportionately experience pain from this cancer, putting them at risk for opioid misuse. Once fully adapted, this therapy will be paired with a remotely delivered brain stimulation treatment (transcranial direct current stimulation). This research will also examine the impact of patient-reported conditions such as depression, anxiety, and sleep problems, as well as of various social determinants of health, on pain. |
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1R61CA280979-01
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Cancer Pain Management: A Technology-Based Intervention for Asian American Breast Cancer Survivors | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Advancing Health Equity in Pain Management | NCI | EMORY UNIVERSITY | IM, EUN-OK (contact); CHEE, WONSHIK | Atlanta, GA | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Advancing Health Equity in Pain and Comorbidities (R61/R33 Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: RFA-NS-22-037 Summary: Asian American women who have survived breast cancer and who also have depression are less likely to receive adequate pain treatment due to cultural stigma attached to breast cancer, cultural attitudes about living with pain and symptoms, and language barriers. This project will use a personalizable, technology-based approach to treat cancer pain and depression in Japanese American, Chinese American, and Korean American women who have survived breast cancer. The intervention will accommodate flexibility, accessibility, and anonymity: three factors that have historically hindered effective pain management for this population of breast cancer survivors. |
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1R61NR020845-01
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Equity Using Interventions for Pain and Depression (EQUIPD) | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Advancing Health Equity in Pain Management | NINR | INDIANA UNIV-PURDUE UNIV AT INDIANAPOLIS | MATTHIAS, MARIANNE | Indianapolis, IN | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Advancing Health Equity in Pain and Comorbidities (R61/R33 Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: RFA-NS-22-037 Summary: Opioid overdose deaths disproportionately affect Black individuals in the United States. While the use of complementary and integrative pain treatments is effective and widely recommended, Black pain patients (especially those who also have depression) face barriers to the use of these approaches. This project will refine, test, and prepare to implement a novel approach to overcoming these treatment barriers. The research will partner with and empower Black patients to find safe, effective pain treatments that best match their values, preferences, and lifestyles. |
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1R61AG081034-01
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Addressing the Chronic Pain Epidemic among Older Adults in Underserved Community Center; The GetActive+ Study | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Advancing Health Equity in Pain Management | NIA | Massachusetts General Hospital | VRANCEANU, ANA-MARIA (contact); RITCHIE, CHRISTINE S | Boston, MA | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Advancing Health Equity in Pain Management (R61/R33 Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: NS22-002 Summary: This research project will include focus group interviews with clinicians, patients, medical interpreters, and healthcare administrators to identify barriers and facilitators to administering the GetActive+ intervention in a group visit at a clinic for older adults with chronic pain, to inform development of a therapy manual. The project will then test the GetActive+ intervention for changes in physical function immediately post-intervention and after 6 months, as well as for changes in pain, sleep, depression, and anxiety at both time points. This research will also assess feasibility, acceptability, fidelity, and adoption of the intervention with patients, providers, and healthcare staff. |
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1R61AT012309-01
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Partners for Pain & Wellbeing Equity: A Randomized Trial of Community Supported Complementary and Integrative Health Self-Management for Back Pain | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Advancing Health Equity in Pain Management | NCCIH | UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA | EVANS, RONI L; LENINGER, BRENT | Minneapolis, MN | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Advancing Health Equity in Pain and Comorbidities (R61/R33 Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: RFA-NS-22-002 Summary: Back pain, including low back and neck pain, is one of the most prevalent and disabling pain disorders. Treatment requires ongoing self-management, but most healthcare systems do not support self-care and instead focus on costly, provider-dependent therapies that remain inaccessible to many Black and Hispanic Americans and individuals with less education and income. This project will address these health disparities by developing a personalized self-management treatment program that includes pain education, mindfulness, cognitive behavioral therapy, and exercise – and make it available in community settings. |
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1R61CA278594-01
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Achieving Equity through SocioCulturally-Informed, Digitally-Enabled Cancer Pain managemeNT" (ASCENT) Clinical Trial | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Advancing Health Equity in Pain Management | NCI | Mayo Clinic | CHEVILLE, ANDREA LYNNE (contact); DOUBENI, CHYKE ABADAMA | Rochester, MN | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Advancing Health Equity in Pain Management (R61/R33 Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: NS22-002 Summary: Cancer pain treatment disparities are associated with a decreased ability to tolerate treatment, as well as increased rates of disability, unemployment, institutionalization, and early death. The Achieving Equity through SocioCulturally-informed, Digitally-Enabled Cancer Pain managemeNT (ASCENT) clinical trial will test whether a novel digitally enabled, collaborative approach to team-based pain management can improve clinical outcomes and reduce long-standing and devastating disparities among rural dwelling and Hispanic/Latinx cancer survivors. A major focus of the randomized, effectiveness clinical trial is to test the hypothesis that the ASCENT intervention will reduce pain and unplanned healthcare use, while improving function, mood, sleep, and quality of life. |
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1R61AT012187-01
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Total-Body PET for Assessing Myofascial Pain | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Discovery and Validation of Novel Targets for Safe and Effective Treatment of Pain | NCCIH | UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT DAVIS | CHAUDHARI, ABHIJIT J (contact); NARDO, LORENZO | Davis, CA | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Developing Quantitative Imaging and Other Relevant Biomarkers of Myofascial Tissues for Clinical Pain Management
NOFO Number: RFA-AT-22-003 Summary: Myofascial pain syndrome is a prevalent and debilitating condition and can aggravate other conditions such as sickle cell disease. This project will use total body imaging using positron emission tomography/computed tomography (TB-PET/CT) to identify and monitor this pain syndrome and potential treatments over time. The research will use TB-PET/CT to assess myofascial tissue effects of chronic low back pain and sickle cell disease pain. The first phase of the project will assess health changes observed by TB-PET/CT imaging in painful and non-painful myofascial tissues compared to healthy myofascial tissue. The second phase of the research will be a randomized, controlled longitudinal interventional study to evaluate the effectiveness of acupuncture on myofascial pain syndrome, using TB-PET/CT imaging to assess changes. |
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1R61DK135406-01
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PAINED: Project Addressing Inequities in the Emergency Department | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Advancing Health Equity in Pain Management | NIDDK | Children's Research Institute | GOYAL, MONIKA KUMARI | Washington, DC | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Advancing Health Equity in Pain Management (R61/R33 Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: NS22-002 Summary: Clinician bias causes inequities in healthcare, and interventions are needed to mitigate and eradicate this bias. This project aims to develop and test the impact of two interventions on overcoming clinician implicit bias in the management of pain for children from ethnic minorities treated in the emergency department. The study will include pediatric patients from under-represented minority groups with pain from long-bone fractures or acute appendicitis who are cared for by racially and ethnically diverse caregivers. Researchers will use stakeholder-informed approaches to establish quality of care metrics and then use clinician audit and feedback as well as data from electronic health records to quantify evidence of bias. |
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1R61MH132249-01
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Latinx Children and Surgery | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Advancing Health Equity in Pain Management | NIMH | University of California, Irvine | KAIN, ZEEV | Irvine, CA | 2022 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Advancing Health Equity in Pain Management (R61/R33 Clinical Trial Required)
NOFO Number: NS22-002 Summary: Both pain experience and treatment response are determined by a variety of factors, including race and ethnicity. Inequities in access to healthcare and pain treatment affect patients from minority populations, such as Hispanic/Latino populations of all age groups. This study will develop and test an online intervention—Web-based Tailored Intervention for Preparation of Parents and Children for Outpatient Surgery (L-WebTIPS)—tailored for Latino families of children having outpatient surgeries. The intervention aims to lower child and family anxiety before surgery as well as to reduce post-surgical pain by enhancing parent self-efficacy and behavioral pain coping strategies. After an exploratory phase to assess usability and acceptability of the intervention, the study will evaluate the impact of L-WebTIPS on child pre-surgery anxiety and post-surgery pain as well assess other child and parent outcomes. |