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RECRUITINGINTERVENTIONAL

SCS for Patient With Painful Diabetic Neuropathy and Peripheral Arterial Disease

Spinal Cord Stimulation for Patients With Painful Diabetic Neuropathy and Peripheral Arterial Disease: Mechanistic Insights From a Single-center, Randomized, Blinded, Sham-controlled Cross-over Proof-of-concept Trial

Important: This information is not medical advice. Talk to your doctor about whether a clinical trial is right for you.

About This Trial

Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) affects over 230 million adults worldwide and is a highly morbid, costly, and disabling condition. Ischemic leg pain drives disability in PAD patients and results from oxygen supply-demand mismatch, autonomic dysfunction, and muscle breakdown. This leg pain, which is unresponsive to traditional pharmacotherapy, limits the patient's tolerance to exercise, which is an important disease-modifying intervention. Spinal cord stimulation is a well-established therapy for medically intractable pain, including painful diabetic neuropathy (PDN) and ischemic pain, but is not part of the standard-of-care for PAD despite limited promising clinical data. Early studies used first-generation, tonic stimulation devices, but with these it was impossible to perform sham-controlled trials to test the treatment. Since then, new types of waveform treatments, including high-frequency spinal cord stimulation (SCS), have been shown to be more effective in the treatment of intractable pain. While high-frequency SCS is approved for PDN treatment, it has never been tested in the treatment of claudication pain from PAD. This study will enroll up to 15 participants between the ages of 19 and 89 who have PAD and PDN and are successfully implanted with a permanent SCS. Twelve weeks after SCS implantation, participants will receive two weeks of stimulation and two weeks of sham intervention, in random starting order. Blood flow, blood pressure, skin oxygen levels, and participant reported pain int the lower extremities will be assessed before SCS implantation, 12 weeks after SCS implantation and during each of the treatment periods. Participants will also complete a quality of life survey at the same time points. Comparisons of these measurements with the baseline and post-implantation measurements to determine the effects of SCS.

Who May Be Eligible (Plain English)

Who May Qualify: - 19 years to 89 years old - Diagnosed diabetes mellitus - Signs or symptoms of neuropathy and maximum baseline visual-analog pain scale ≥ 5 cm and peripheral arterial disease (diagnosed by ankle-brachial index \< 0.90 or vascular imaging studies) with claudication and exertion-induced visual-analog pain scale ≥ 6 cm for a minimum of 3 months - Successful spinal cord stimulator (SCS) trial (\>50% relief of chronic lower extremity pain) and will have a new permanent SCS placed prior to study intervention Who Should NOT Join This Trial: - Uncontrolled psychological or psychiatric disorder - Inability to hold antithrombotic therapy per the American Society of Regional Anesthesia guidelines - Non-healing wounds - Gangrene - Critical limb ischemia - Prior lower extremity amputation - Inability to adhere to study follow-up - Mechanical spine instability based on flexion/extension radiographs of the lumbar spine - Prior or current spinal cord stimulator implant Always talk to your doctor about whether this trial is right for you.

Original Eligibility Criteria

View original clinical language
Inclusion Criteria: * 19 years to 89 years old * Diagnosed diabetes mellitus * Signs or symptoms of neuropathy and maximum baseline visual-analog pain scale ≥ 5 cm and peripheral arterial disease (diagnosed by ankle-brachial index \< 0.90 or vascular imaging studies) with claudication and exertion-induced visual-analog pain scale ≥ 6 cm for a minimum of 3 months * Successful spinal cord stimulator (SCS) trial (\>50% relief of chronic lower extremity pain) and will have a new permanent SCS placed prior to study intervention Exclusion Criteria: * Uncontrolled psychological or psychiatric disorder * Inability to hold antithrombotic therapy per the American Society of Regional Anesthesia guidelines * Non-healing wounds * Gangrene * Critical limb ischemia * Prior lower extremity amputation * Inability to adhere to study follow-up * Mechanical spine instability based on flexion/extension radiographs of the lumbar spine * Prior or current spinal cord stimulator implant

Treatments Being Tested

DEVICE

Spinal cord stimulation

active spinal cord stimulation

DEVICE

Sham stimulation

Sham stimulation

Locations (1)

University of Nebraska Medical Center
Omaha, Nebraska, United States