Millions of Americans spend each day in severe pain associated with arthritis. The longer the pain persists, the harder it is to treat. Efficacious prevention strategies are needed. A major barrier to chronic pain prevention is a gap in knowledge about how acute joint pain leads to changes in central nervous system (CNS) pathways responsible for sensing, transmitting and regulating pain. This process, which results in widespread pain sensitivity, is termed pain centralization. The long-term goal of this research program is to design interventions to prevent pain centralization, and hence chronic pain, in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). The objective is to identify modifiable clinical factors and neurobiological pathways that lead to the development of chronic pain in early RA. The focus of this application is early RA because the first 12 months after RA diagnosis likely represents a critical time in which to prevent the acute to chronic pain transition. Preliminary data from the Canadian Early Arthritis Cohort (CATCH) showed that the incidence of fibromyalgia, the prototypical centralized pain condition, is highest during the first year after RA diagnosis. The central hypothesis is that sleep problems, psychosocial factors, and abnormal CNS (e.g., brain, spinal cord) regulatory mechanisms predict the development of pain centralization in the first year after RA diagnosis. The central hypothesis will be tested by pursuing the following three specific aims: 1) to identify modifiable factors that predict symptoms of pain centralization in early RA; 2) to identify quantitative sensory testing (QST) evidence of augmented CNS pain processing that predict symptoms of pain centralization; and 3) to define the functional and anatomic brain pathways underlying pain centralization in early RA. For the first aim, 534 early RA patients from CATCH and CATCH- US (US extension of CATCH) will be enrolled to complete measures of sleep, pain, psychosocial factors, and disability administered at 0, 3, 6 and 12 months after entry into the cohorts. For the second aim, 125 early RA patients will undergo QST, a type of testing that involves assessing response to well-defined, quantifiable painful stimuli (e.g., pressure and cold), at 0, 3 and 12 months. For the third aim, 95 patients from Aim 2 will undergo magnetic resonance imaging at 0 and 12 months to assess neuroimaging markers (e.g., correlations in activity between different brain regions, volume of tissue in brain areas consisting of nerve cell bodies) that have previously been shown to be involved in pain centralization. The proposed research is innovative because it represents a substantive departure from the status quo by: 1) focusing on early RA, 2) incorporating assessments of pain-related constructs into two multi-site early RA registries, and 3) employing a multimodal approach, including patient-reported measures of pain, QST, and neuroimaging, to assess pain pathways. The proposed research is significant because it will set the stage for intervention design (e.g., cognitive behavioral therapy to treat sleep problems, early treatment of pain with gabapentin) and future trials to prevent chronic pain, ultimately leading to a paradigm shift in the management of pain in systemic inflammatory diseases.
The proposed research is relevant to public health because it will provide quality data on the course, impact and outcomes of pain centralization (and hence chronic pain) in individuals with rheumatoid arthritis, a common systemic inflammatory disease. The proposed research is relevant to the NIH's mission because it addresses the National Pain Strategy's objective to decrease the prevalence and impact of chronic pain by providing fundamental knowledge to guide efforts to prevent the acute to chronic pain transition.
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