AI Article Synopsis

  • Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) is a surgical method used to treat severe chronic neuropathic pain and is thought to have a carryover effect, where pain perception is delayed after the device is turned off.
  • An international study was conducted with 158 eligible patients to systematically measure the carryover time, defined as the duration between deactivation and reactivation of the SCS device.
  • The findings revealed a median carryover time of five hours, with various factors like the type of pain and stimulation influencing the length of this carryover time.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) is a surgical treatment for severe, chronic, neuropathic pain. It is based on one to two lead(s) implanted in the epidural space, stimulating the dorsal column. It has long been assumed that when deactivating SCS, there is a variable interval before the patient perceives the return of the pain, a phenomenon often termed echo or carryover effect. Although the carryover effect has been problematized as a source of error in crossover studies, no experimental investigation of the effect has been published. This open, prospective, international multicenter study aimed to systematically document, quantify, and investigate the carryover effect in SCS.

Materials And Methods: Eligible patients with a beneficial effect from their SCS treatment were instructed to deactivate their SCS device in a home setting and to reactivate it when their pain returned. The primary outcome was duration of carryover time defined as the time interval from deactivation to reactivation. Central clinical parameters (age, sex, indication for SCS, SCS treatment details, pain score) were registered and correlated with carryover time using nonparametric tests (Mann-Whitney/Kruskal-Wallis) for categorical data and linear regression for continuous data.

Results: In total, 158 patients were included in the analyses. A median carryover time of five hours was found (interquartile range 2.5;21 hours). Back pain as primary indication for SCS, high-frequency stimulation, and higher pain score at the time of deactivation were correlated with longer carryover time.

Conclusions: This study confirms the existence of the carryover effect and indicates a remarkably high degree of interindividual variation. The results suggest that the magnitude of carryover may be correlated to the nature of the pain condition and possibly stimulation paradigms.

Clinical Trial Registration: The Clinicaltrials.gov registration number for the study is NCT03386058.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neurom.2024.01.002DOI Listing

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