News & ExpertsUVA Chronic Pain Study May Uncover New Treatments

UVA Chronic Pain Study May Uncover New Treatments

University of Virginia (UVA) Health researchers are pioneering brain stimulation as a new way to treat chronic pain that does not respond to medication.

Their innovative approach will receive more than $5 million from the National Institutes of Health to fund a clinical trial.

Conceived by a new pain research team at UVA, the approach aims to modulate pain signals from deep inside the brain. The group has early evidence that a region of the brain called the insula plays an important role in our perception of pain. Based on that evidence, the team will optimize an established “neuromodulation” technique called deep brain stimulation for use in the insula, in the hopes it will provide much-needed pain relief.

If successful, the approach could shed light on the fundamental nature of pain itself, the researchers say.

“For the first time, we will be able to monitor the brain’s signals and distinguish how they look when the patient is having pain versus when they are not in pain,” said Dr. Jeff Elias of the UVA School of Medicine’s Department of Neurological Surgery and the UVA Brain Institute. “Understanding the fundamental changes that occur to our brains when we develop a pain condition is critical if we are going to design ways to manipulate and alter these pain signals.”

About the UVA Chronic Pain Study

About the UVA Chronic Pain StudyUVA Health has assembled an expert team of specialists to address the pain crisis and opioid epidemic. Chang-Chia “Jeff” Liu was strategically recruited to the Department of Neurological Surgery with support from the UVA Brain Institute to work with Elias in developing new treatments for pain. Liu is an electrophysiologist who studies how the nervous system transmits pain signals and how the brain perceives pain.

Dr. Mark Quigg serves as director of UVA’s Electroencephalogram and Evoked Potential Lab. He specializes in the brain’s rhythms using EEG and in brain mapping techniques and is a clinical trial expert. Finally, the Department of Anesthesiology recently recruited Patrick Finan, a clinical psychologist and scientist specializing in measuring clinical aspects of pain, including its effects on emotions, cognition, and daily function.

The multidisciplinary team is uniquely suited to study the complex problem of chronic pain.

“Our team combines depth of knowledge in the mechanisms and measurement of pain along with expertise in brain surgery and brain mapping,” Quigg said. “UVA – with critical help from the Brain Institute – has a unique opportunity to advance treatment in the widespread and difficult problem of chronic pain.”

UVA Health will draw on this far-reaching expertise in its efforts to better understand chronic neuropathic (nerve) pain and how to provide relief for patients who suffer from its debilitating effects.

Chronic nerve pain develops when some part of the nervous system is injured. Some patients with neuropathic pain do not experience relief with existing treatments. Pharmaceuticals such as opioids are often insufficient for pain management and commonly cause harmful side effects. Opioids also carry a serious risk of addiction, as seen in communities across the nation. Neuropathic pain is recognized as one of the more difficult pain conditions to treat.

Deep-brain stimulation, or DBS, may offer an alternative to existing treatments. It is already used to treat epilepsy and movement disorders, and there is emerging evidence that it may be effective for chronic pain. To test this, UVA will launch a clinical trial in 12 patient volunteers with refractory, or treatment-resistant, neuropathic pain. The UVA experts will map the volunteers’ brains and stimulate sections of the insula, to see if the stimulation provides pain relief.

Participants who benefit will then move into a randomized, double-blinded trial. This trial will implant electrodes along the insula to see if DBS can provide ongoing relief.

The researchers also will study the volunteers’ brain activity in hopes of identifying biological indicators of pain. Such “biomarkers” would let doctors better assess and treat pain in patients and could be used to develop a new DBS system specifically for pain management.

The project, the researchers hope, will provide important insights into the very nature of pain. “Pain is a subjective experience,” Liu said. “We are not serious if we don’t directly study pain-related brain activity in patients.”

Next Steps

The researchers plan to begin enrolling patients in the clinical trial this summer. For more information about the study, or if you or someone you know may want to enroll, researchers suggest contacting Judy Beenhakker at 434-243-7336 or email fusbrain@virginia.edu.

Ultimately, the researchers hope that their efforts will lead to a new treatment to relieve the suffering many patients with chronic nerve pain must endure.

“Patients with chronic neuropathic pain currently have few effective options for pain relief, and poorly managed pain often leads to a cascade of downstream effects that interfere with patients’ work, family and social lives,” Finan said.

Have You Heard About UVA Health’s New Chronic Pain Study?

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1 COMMENT
  1. Outstanding approach. Does anybody in the community have experience with neurostimulation? It’d be great to hear anything, as there are versions of this currently used. I use a primitive version on myself for acute pain, like a cut or sting. I bite or pinch the area around the injury, sending a secondary pain signal to the brain from the same area. It seems to confuse the brain and “cancels” out some of the pain. Needless to say, it stops once I stop the biting!

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