Melatonin for CHronic BAck Pain (The MOCHA Trial): a Randomized, Double Blind, Placebo-controlled Trial

Status: Recruiting
Location: See location...
Intervention Type: Drug
Study Type: Interventional
Study Phase: Phase 3
SUMMARY

According to the World Health Organization (WHO) Global Burden of Disease study, back pain is one of the conditions impacting disability the most worldwide.Pain medication use in patients with chronic back pain is substantial, but the efficacy of commonly used analgesics such as paracetamol, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), muscle relaxants and opioids compared with placebo are modest, with effects typically less than 10 points on a 0-100 pain scale. Importantly, these analgesics are not harmless due to gastrointestinal and cardiovascular side-effects (NSAIDs) and risk of dependency and addiction (opioids). This often leave general practitioners without good treatment options for many patients with chronic low back pain. More than half of patients with chronic back pain also have sleep problems (i.e. insomnia), which negatively affect daily function, general health and quality of life. Research suggest that insomnia has negative effects on pain processing, and although the relationship between pain and insomnia is bi-directional, insomnia is considered to be a stronger predictor of pain than pain for the development of insomnia. Melatonin is a widely available drug worldwide, and well known for its use in people with sleep disorders and jetlag. Melatonin is a naturally occurring hormone excreted by the pineal gland that is part of regulating the circadian rhythm (sleep-wake patterns). Unlike commonly used drugs to treat back pain, the safety profile of melatonin is favorable with no adverse events of major clinical significance reported in the treatment of sleep disorders. In recent years, some preliminary studies have showed a promising effect of Melatonin for treatments of pain. A meta-analysis reported an effect size of 0.65 (95%CI 0.34 to 0.96) of Melatonin (doses ranging between 3-10 mg before sleep) compared with placebo in reducing pain in patients with non-musculoskeletal chronic pain (e.g. migraine, irritable bowel syndrome, burning mouth syndrome), suggesting that Melatonin could potentially also be a valid treatment option for chronic musculoskeletal pain patients.

Eligibility
Participation Requirements
Sex: All
Minimum Age: 18
Maximum Age: 64
Healthy Volunteers: f
View:

⁃ To be eligible for the trial patients must fulfill all the following inclusion criteria:

• Age 18 to 64 years

• Understand and write Danish

• Back pain for 3 months or longer

• Back pain must be present on 'most days' or 'every day' within the past 3 months (will be checked by the question: 'In the past 3 months, how often did you have back pain? - response options: 'never'; 'some days'; 'most days'; 'every day')

• Back pain must limit life or work activities on 'some days', 'most days', or 'every day' within the past 3 months. (will be checked by the question: 'In the past 3 months, how often did your back pain limit your life or work activities? - response options: 'never'; 'some days'; 'most days'; 'every day')

• Average pain intensity of 4 or higher on 0-10 Numeric Rating Scale \[NRS\] in the past 7 days (ranging from 'no pain' to 'worst imaginable pain').

• All fertile women must use safe contraception (Spiral, birth control pills, contraceptive patch, contraceptive vaginal ring or gestagen injections) for 3 weeks before and 1 week after the trial. If the participants' normal lifestyle includes sexual abstinence, they do not have to use contraception. Instead, they can give an oral informed consent, that they will be sexually abstinent during the trial. A woman is considered non-fertile if she is sterilized, hysterectomized, bilateral oophorectomized or is postmenopausal. A woman is considered postmenopausal when vaginal bleeding has been absent for 1 year (reported by the participant).

Locations
Other Locations
Denmark
Pain Center, University Hospital Odense
RECRUITING
Odense
Contact Information
Primary
Kubra Kilic, MSc
Kubra.Kilic@rsyd.dk
004565413869
Backup
Henrik Bjarke Vaegter, PhD
hbv@rsyd.dk
004565413869
Time Frame
Start Date: 2024-12-11
Estimated Completion Date: 2026-11-01
Participants
Target number of participants: 220
Treatments
Experimental: Melatonin
2 Melatonin tablets (each 5 mg) once daily (egual 10 mg/day) in the evening, 30 min. before going to sleep for 6 weeks. If a participant experiences an adverse event deemed related to the study medication of grade 2 or higher according to Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) version 5.0 the dose will be reduced to 5 mg/day.
Placebo_comparator: Placebo
2 identical appearing placebo tablets once daily in the evening, 30 min. before going to sleep for 6 weeks. If a participant experiences an adverse event deemed related to the study medication of grade 2 or higher according to Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) version 5.0 the dose will be reduced to 1 tablet.
Sponsors
Leads: Odense University Hospital
Collaborators: T&W Engineering A/S, University of Southern Denmark, Region of Southern Denmark, University of Aarhus, Erasmus Medical Center

This content was sourced from clinicaltrials.gov