Matching Adults to Treatments for Chronic Pain (MATCH) Study

NAActive, not recruitingINTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment

330

Participants

Timeline

Start Date

April 26, 2023

Primary Completion Date

March 31, 2026

Study Completion Date

March 31, 2026

Conditions
Chronic Pain
Interventions
BEHAVIORAL

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

The CBT intervention will be used to help participants learn about the role of cognitions (particularly pain catastrophizing), pain beliefs (including perceived control), and maladaptive or unhelpful coping behaviors in chronic pain. This technique will help participants: (1) identify and change or restructure unhelpful or negative thinking about pain; (2) utilize positive coping strategies including positive coping self-statements; relaxation techniques; behavioral activation (including setting goals for activation), activity pacing and scheduling; and (3) cope with pain flare-ups.

BEHAVIORAL

Hypnotic Cognitive Therapy (HYP-CT)

The HYP-CT intervention will be used to help participants learn about the role of hypnosis to reduce pain, increase comfort and well-being, and to instill and reinforce healthy, adaptive cognitions. This technique will help participants to use their ability to enter a state of focused attention to then increase their acceptance of new adaptive ideas about pain provided both by (1) clinicians during sessions and on audio recordings, as well as (2) the participants themselves during self-hypnosis practice.

BEHAVIORAL

Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT)

The MBCT intervention will be used to help participants learn about the role of MBCT in training the mind to respond more adaptively to pain. This technique will help participants: (1) apply the skills they learn not only to pain but also to the problems pain causes for them, including sleep disturbance, depressed mood, stress, and other problems; (2) build on their strengths and their innate ability to focus their attention at will, and to use this ability to mindfully perceive experience in a non-judgmental, non-reactive way; and (3) notice their moment-to-moment experience and to shift their relationship to this experience. With enhanced mindful awareness comes the opportunity to then mindfully choose how to respond to the pain in a way that reduces stress and is most helpful or adaptive.

Trial Locations (3)

98104

University of Washington, Ninth and Jefferson Building, Seattle

98108

VA Puget Sound Health Care System, Seattle Division, Seattle

98493

VA Puget Sound Health Care System, American Lake, Tacoma

All Listed Sponsors
collaborator

National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH)

NIH

collaborator

VA Puget Sound Health Care System

FED

lead

University of Washington

OTHER