A groundbreaking study has discovered a promising new approach to managing chronic pain for dialysis patients through pain coping skills training. Researchers found that specialized coaching sessions can significantly reduce patient suffering and improve overall quality of life. The innovative method focuses on psychological techniques like cognitive behavioral therapy and mindfulness, offering an alternative to traditional opioid treatments. With 643 participants across multiple medical centers, this research represents a major step forward in addressing the complex pain challenges faced by dialysis patients.
February 03, 2025
Study offers new hope against chronic pain for dialysis patients
"It is great to see these results in
press and offer alternatives other than opioids to our patients on
dialysis" - Dr. Mark Unruh
New Mexico, February 1: People receiving haemodialysis for kidney failure
frequently feel chronic pain associated with their disease, which can be
difficult to manage with opioid medication and other traditional treatments.
Key Points
1 Specialized coaching helps
dialysis patients manage chronic pain effectively
2 Psychological interventions
provide alternative to opioid treatments
3 Study demonstrates modest
improvements in daily activity limitations
4 Targeted approach addresses
pain-related anxiety and stress
A new study finds that offering
these patients pain coping skills training (PCST) significantly reduced their
suffering and improved their quality of life.
Twenty-two New Mexicans - many of them Native American - participated in
UNM's arm of the study, said Mark Unruh, MD, Chair, UNM Department of Internal
Medicine
"This is particularly important for these patients since the
therapeutic choices for pain management are limited and the use of opioids has
been shown to be associated with poor outcomes in this group."
The randomized controlled study enrolled 643 participants from 16 medical
centers and 103 dialysis clinics in The HOPE Consortium, an ongoing multi-site
study exploring new treatments for dialysis patients.
"New Mexico played a large role in the trial," he said.
"We served as the primary outcomes measurement core and New Mexico had a
supplement to recruit from rural clinics with a focus on our underrepresented
populations."
Multiple factors likely contribute to dialysis-related pain. Patients
tend to be older and living with arthritis, diabetes, peripheral neuropathy and
back pain, he said.
"Dialysis by itself may contribute, either directly or indirectly,
like having uremic toxins in your bloodstream," Unruh said. "The
process of going to dialysis and having a needle stuck in your arm may be
challenging for some people to deal with."
Doctors face challenges in treating dialysis-related pain because
patients have kidney failure. "We are kind of loathe to use nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory agents, and in general we avoid opioids," he said.
"Certain opioids are better than others, but a lot of them are cleared in
part from the kidneys. You kind of have your hands tied."
Half of the study participants were randomly assigned to receive the PCST
intervention, while the other was assigned to receive usual care. The PCST
consisted of 45-minute coaching sessions by counselors delivered via phone or
video for 12 weeks, followed by an additional 12 weeks of daily automated
interactive voice response sessions to monitor the participants' progress.
The content included modules addressing pain-related anxiety, stress and
sleep difficulties along with CBT, mindfulness, pain education, experiential
training, with the overarching goal of enhancing self-efficacy for applying the
acquired coping skills.
"It's like a recipe with 12 components," Unruh said. "You
talk about strategies, and focus on reframing and limiting catastrophizing.
You'll do some mindfulness meditation, and then you'll talk about addressing,
anxiety and depression and strategies to prevent backsliding."
The study found that patients who underwent the PCST intervention showed
modest improvements in the extent to which pain interfered with their daily
activities, he said. "The relevance would be that, if I'm seeing someone
in a clinic who has chronic pain, rather than prescribing an opioid, I could
refer them to a psychologist who practices CBT, and they could kind of adopt
it."
The study is an example of how research can lead to improvements in
clinical care, Unruh said. "It is great to see these results in press and
offer alternatives other than opioids to our patients on dialysis for treatment
of chronic pain."
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