This paper is only available as a PDF. To read, Please Download here.
The purpose of this secondary analysis was to identify treatment effect moderators
from a large, pragmatic, cluster randomized trial for prevention of chronic low back
pain (LBP). The TARGET trial was conducted at 76 primary care clinics in 4 health
systems across the United States between May 2016 and June 2018. Practices were randomly
assigned (1:1) to stratified care (intervention) or usual care (control). The intervention
included identifying high risk patients with acute LBP and triggering an electronic
best practice alert for referral for psychologically informed physical therapy (PIPT).
We estimated and compared average Oswestry Disability Questionnaire (ODQ) scores at
6 months using linear mixed models controlling for baseline ODQ scores with site (fixed
effects) and clinic (random effects) to account for cluster randomization. Baseline
factors were considered treatment effect moderators if the type III test for the treatment
x factor interaction resulted in a p-value ≤0.15. These analyses included 1,250 patients
with completed baseline data and 6-month ODQ scores. Baseline characteristics were
(Intervention, Control respectively): under 45 years of age (44%, 43%), female (61%,
62%), White (81%, 74%), non-Hispanic (91%, 92%), obese (50%, 48%), and non-smoking
(65%, 68%). Potential effect modifiers were pain medication and smoking (p's ≤ 0.15).
The intervention group had larger 6 month ODQ improvement for patients taking ≥3 pain
medications, (7.0 points, P = 0.05) and current smokers (5.7 points, P = 0.02). In
the TARGET trial smoking and taking ≥3 pain medications were patient level factors
related to larger ODQ improvements from PIPT. The magnitude of improvements did not
exceed clinically meaningful thresholds, however these factors still could be used
to tailor receipt of PIPT treatment. These findings add to the existing treatment
moderation literature for LBP but need to confirmed in additional trials. Patient-Centered
Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) contract # PCS-1402-10867.
To read this article in full you will need to make a payment
Purchase one-time access:
Academic & Personal: 24 hour online accessCorporate R&D Professionals: 24 hour online accessOne-time access price info
- For academic or personal research use, select 'Academic and Personal'
- For corporate R&D use, select 'Corporate R&D Professionals'
Subscribe:
Subscribe to The Journal of PainAlready a print subscriber? Claim online access
Already an online subscriber? Sign in
Register: Create an account
Institutional Access: Sign in to ScienceDirect
Article info
Identification
Copyright
© 2021 Published by Elsevier Inc.