2022
DOI: 10.1186/s13063-022-06431-5
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IMI2-PainCare-BioPain-RCT2 protocol: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover, multicenter trial in healthy subjects to investigate the effects of lacosamide, pregabalin, and tapentadol on biomarkers of pain processing observed by non-invasive neurophysiological measurements of human spinal cord and brainstem activity

Abstract: Background IMI2-PainCare-BioPain-RCT2 is one of four similarly designed clinical studies aiming at profiling a set of functional biomarkers of drug effects on specific compartments of the nociceptive system that could serve to accelerate the future development of analgesics. IMI2-PainCare-BioPain-RCT2 will focus on human spinal cord and brainstem activity using biomarkers derived from non-invasive neurophysiological measurements. Methods This is a … Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
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“…Here, we set out to provide a comprehensive assessment of the reliability of task-based spinal fMRI by investigating heat-pain evoked spinal cord BOLD responses. We chose the domain of pain for this endeavor for two reasons: one the one hand, changes in spinal cord processing are assumed to contribute to chronic pain (D’Mello & Dickenson, 2008; Kuner & Flor, 2017; Prescott et al, 2014) and on the other hand the development of pain biomarkers is currently a topic of intense interest (Davis et al, 2020; Leone et al, 2022; Mouraux & Iannetti, 2018; Sluka et al, 2023; Tracey, 2021), making spinal fMRI a prime candidate for inclusion in such clinical developments. In contrast to previous studies, we acquired data on two consecutive days using an identical experimental set up and a relatively large sample of 40 participants, as specified in an accompanying preregistration.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Here, we set out to provide a comprehensive assessment of the reliability of task-based spinal fMRI by investigating heat-pain evoked spinal cord BOLD responses. We chose the domain of pain for this endeavor for two reasons: one the one hand, changes in spinal cord processing are assumed to contribute to chronic pain (D’Mello & Dickenson, 2008; Kuner & Flor, 2017; Prescott et al, 2014) and on the other hand the development of pain biomarkers is currently a topic of intense interest (Davis et al, 2020; Leone et al, 2022; Mouraux & Iannetti, 2018; Sluka et al, 2023; Tracey, 2021), making spinal fMRI a prime candidate for inclusion in such clinical developments. In contrast to previous studies, we acquired data on two consecutive days using an identical experimental set up and a relatively large sample of 40 participants, as specified in an accompanying preregistration.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%