2021
DOI: 10.1111/ner.13321
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Analgesic Efficacy of “Burst” and Tonic (500 Hz) Spinal Cord Stimulation Patterns: A Randomized Placebo-Controlled Crossover Study

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Cited by 17 publications
(14 citation statements)
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References 27 publications
(29 reference statements)
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“…Parallel and crossover RCTs have previously reported no differences in effectiveness when comparing different paresthesia-free frequencies, 43 high frequency (10 kHz) vs paresthesia-inducing stimulation, 44 high frequency (5 kHz) vs placebo, 45 and burst vs different frequencies (ie, 40, 500, and 1200 Hz). 46 However, superior pain reduction has been observed for tonic subthreshold stimulation at 500 Hz vs burst or placebo, 47 high frequency (10 kHz) vs paresthesia-inducing stimulation, 17 burst vs tonic stimulation, 16 or 5882 Hz vs 1200 Hz, 3030 Hz, and sham. 48 Not only different study settings and population characteristics, but also program settings, number of leads, and electrode contacts, or how sham stimulation was enabled may all contribute to the discrepancy in the results Methodological and reporting in trials of SCS have been previously highlighted.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Parallel and crossover RCTs have previously reported no differences in effectiveness when comparing different paresthesia-free frequencies, 43 high frequency (10 kHz) vs paresthesia-inducing stimulation, 44 high frequency (5 kHz) vs placebo, 45 and burst vs different frequencies (ie, 40, 500, and 1200 Hz). 46 However, superior pain reduction has been observed for tonic subthreshold stimulation at 500 Hz vs burst or placebo, 47 high frequency (10 kHz) vs paresthesia-inducing stimulation, 17 burst vs tonic stimulation, 16 or 5882 Hz vs 1200 Hz, 3030 Hz, and sham. 48 Not only different study settings and population characteristics, but also program settings, number of leads, and electrode contacts, or how sham stimulation was enabled may all contribute to the discrepancy in the results Methodological and reporting in trials of SCS have been previously highlighted.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Having published methodological guidance for the conduct and reporting of sham‐controlled neuromodulation trials, we applaud the authors for conducting this study 2 . However, importantly, our recent 3‐arm sham controlled SCS study (sham vs four spike burst (BST) versus tonic subthreshold stimulation at 500 Hz (T500)) had a similar finding but different conclusions to those of Hara et al Although there was no difference in mean pain reduction for BST versus sham (5%; 95% CI, −13% to 27%; p = 0.59), T500 had a greater pain reduction than both sham (25%; 95% CI, 8%–38%; p = 0.008) or BST (28%; 95% CI, 13%–41%; p = 0.002) 3 …”
mentioning
confidence: 60%
“…2 However, importantly, our recent 3-arm sham controlled SCS study (sham vs four spike burst (BST) versus tonic subthreshold stimulation at 500 Hz (T500)) had a similar finding but different conclusions to those of Hara et al Although there was no difference in mean pain reduction for BST versus sham (5%; 95% CI, −13% to 27%; p = 0.59), T500 had a greater pain reduction than both sham (25%; 95% CI, 8%-38%; p = 0.008) or BST (28%; 95% CI, 13%-41%; p = 0.002). 3 In this editorial, we note several issues in design, conduct, and conclusions of the Hara et al trial that make the authors' conclusion of no effect of SCS compared to sham an unsafe one.…”
Section: E D I T O R I a Lmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…First, the article stated that both the participants and institutional review board were informed that spinal cord stimulation within the standard of care was to be used, and participants crossed over to sham every 3 months. Even though spinal cord stimulation has been validated in peer-reviewed publications, this study instead implemented a different type of spinal cord burst stimulation using parameters shown to be no better than placebo, which suggests that this trial compared a placebo vs another placebo. Were the participants and institutional review board informed that this trial would use a form of spinal cord stimulation lacking prior published efficacy data?…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%