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This is a randomized and controlled study investigating the feasibility and acceptability of a dry needling treatment for women suffering from provoked vestibulodynia. Following their enrollment in the study, participants will undergo a gynecological examination for confirmation of their diagnoses of provoked vestibulodynia. Women diagnosed with provoked vestibulodynia will be randomized into the dry needling group or the sham-needle group. The dry needling group will receive 6 sessions of real dry needling for 6 consecutive weeks. The sham group will receive 6 sessions of sham needling for 6 consecutive weeks, using a validated sham-needle. Outcomes measures will be assessed at baseline and at post-treatment and will include: feasibility and acceptability variables, pain intensity and quality, pain during palpation and pressure pain threshold, psychosexual variables, perceived improvement and satisfaction after the treatment as well as pelvic floor muscle stiffness and function.
Up to 18% of reproductive-aged women experience chronic pain in the vulvar region during sexual intercourse. This chronic pain condition is called vulvodynia. The main subtype of this pain condition is provoked vestibulodynia (PVD), which is characterized by a sharp or burning pain at the vaginal opening when there is a pressure applied to the vulvar vestibule or attempting vaginal penetration. Women suffering from PVD suffer from sexual dysfunctions, psychological distress and worsened quality of life. The treatment options currently available are still quite limited and some women still experience pain despite undertaking all options available. We, therefore, proposed a randomized and controlled study to investigate the feasibility and acceptability of a dry needling treatment for women suffering from PVD. Women diagnosed with provoked vestibulodynia will be randomized into the dry needling group or the sham-needle group. Participants and evaluators will be blinded. The dry needling group will receive 6 sessions of real dry needling for 6 consecutive weeks. For the first three sessions, the dry needling/or sham techniques will be aimed at the muscles of the trunk, lower back, hips and SI joints. For the last 3 treatment sessions, the dry needling/or sham techniques will aimed at the pelvic floor muscles. The sham group will receive the same 6 sessions of sham needling for 6 consecutive weeks, using a validated sham-needle. Outcomes measures will be assessed at baseline and 2 weeks post-treatment and will include: feasibility (adherence to treatment, retention rates, adverse effects, recruitment rates and data on dry needling (needles, # of insertions, pain related) and acceptability variables. Secondary outcomes will include pain intensity during intercourse (numeric scale) and quality (McGill pain questionnaire), pain during palpation and pressure pain threshold (Pressure algometer), psychosexual variables (sexual distress and sexual function), change in pain catastrophizing, change in quality of life in domains associated with chronic pelvic pain (Pelvic Pain Impact questionnaire, severity of symptoms related to central sensitization), perceived improvement and satisfaction after the treatment as well as pelvic floor muscle stiffness (shearwave elastography and dynamometric speculum)and function (dynamometric speculum), blinding efficacy.
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Experimental: Real Dry needling | Experimental | 1 dry needling treatment per week for 6 consecutive weeks |
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| Sham: Non penetrating dry needling | Sham Comparator | 1 non penetrating dry needling per week for 6 consecutive weeks |
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| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Real Dry needling | Other | Real dry needling will be applied to the pelvic floor, hip and lower back muscles. |
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| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Adherence to treatment sessions | a. To determine feasibility, the patients' adherence to treatment sessions will be recorded (present vs absent) as well as reasons for non-attendance. | Through treatment completion (session 1 to 6; 6 weeks of treatment) |
| Adherence to treatment protocol | a. To determine feasibility by assessing adherence to treatment sessions. | Through treatment completion (session 1 to 6; 6 weeks of treatment) |
| Retention rate | a. To determine feasibility by assessing the percentage of participants completing the post-treatment assessment. Reason for dropouts will be compiled | Baseline to Post-treatment assessment (2-week post-treatment) |
| Adverse effects | a. Adverse effects observed and reported will be documented at each treatment session and at the post-treatment assessment. | Through treatment completion (session 1 to 6; 6 weeks of treatment) |
| Adverse effects | a. Adverse effects observed and reported will be documented at each treatment session and at the post-treatment assessment. | Post-treatment assessment (2-week post-treatment) |
| Recruitment rate | a. To determine feasibility by assessing the percentage of participants included versus the participants screened. The barriers and reasons for refusing to participate as well as the reasons for exclusion will be documented | Baseline |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Change in pain intensity during intercourse | To explore changes in pain intensity during intercourse (Numerical Rating Scale (NRS)). Ranging from 0 to 10, where 0 is no pain at all, and 10 is the worst pain ever. | Baseline to Post-treatment assessment (2-week post-treatment) |
| Change in pain quality |
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Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
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| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Melanie Morin, PhD | Université de Sherbrooke | Principal Investigator |
| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Research Center of the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Sherbrooke | Sherbrooke | Quebec | J1H5N4 | Canada |
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D004414 | Dyspareunia |
| D056650 | Vulvodynia |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D005831 | Genital Diseases, Female |
| D052776 | Female Urogenital Diseases |
| D005261 | Female Urogenital Diseases and Pregnancy Complications |
| D000091642 | Urogenital Diseases |
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| C005703 | salicylhydroxamic acid |
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Baseline evaluation - Randomization to real dry needling or sham dry needling (6 sessions for 6 consecutive weeks) - post-treatment evaluation (2-week post-treatment)
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| Non penetrating dry needling | Other | Sham non penetrating dry needling (fixed needle in an introducer tube) will be applied to the pelvic floor, hip and lower back muscles. |
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| Intervention Acceptability Questionnaire |
a. The Intervention Acceptability Questionnaire will be used to assess the participants' acceptability of the interventions. This questionnaire consists of 6 items measured on a VAS scale (Minimum value: 0; Maximum Value: 10). Each item is analyzed separately, with a greater score meaning higher acceptability of the intervention. |
| Baseline |
| Intervention Acceptability Questionnaire | a. The Intervention Acceptability Questionnaire will be used to assess the participants' acceptability of the interventions. This questionnaire consists of 6 items measured on a VAS scale (Minimum value: 0; Maximum Value: 10). Each item is analyzed separately, with a greater score meaning higher acceptability of the intervention. | After treatment session 3 (week 3) |
| Intervention Acceptability Questionnaire | a. The Intervention Acceptability Questionnaire will be used to assess the participants' acceptability of the interventions. This questionnaire consists of 6 items measured on a VAS scale (Minimum value: 0; Maximum Value: 10). Each item is analyzed separately, with a greater score meaning higher acceptability of the intervention. | Post-treatment assessment (2-week post-treatment) |
To explore changes on the sensory, affective, and evaluative components of pain (McGill-Melzack Questionnaire). Ranging from 0 to 78, higher scores mean worst outcome (higher pain). |
| Baseline to Post-treatment assessment (2-week post-treatment) |
| Change in pain catastrophizing | To explore changes on pain catastrophizing (Pain catastrophizing scale (PCS)). Ranging from 0 to 52, higher scores mean worse outcome (higher pain catastrophizing). | Baseline to Post-treatment assessment (2-week post-treatment) |
| Change in fear of pain | To explore changes in fear of pain (Pain anxiety Symptoms Scale (PASS-20). Ranging from 0 to 100, higher scores mean worse outcome (higher fear of pain). | Baseline to Post-treatment assessment (2-week post-treatment) |
| Change in sexual function | To explore changes in sexual function (Female Sexual Function Index - FSFI). Ranging from 2 to 36, lower scores mean wort outcome (low sexual function). | Baseline to Post-treatment assessment (2-week post-treatment) |
| Change in sexual distress | To explore changes in sexual distress (Female Sexual Distress Scale - FSDS). Ranging from 0 to 52, higher scores mean worse outcome (higher sexually related distress). | Baseline to Post-treatment assessment (2-week post-treatment) |
| Change in quality of life in the domains associated with chronic pelvic pain | To explore changes in quality of life Pelvic Pain Impact Questionnaire (PPIQ). Ranging from 0 to 32, higher scores mean worse outcome (less quality of life associated with pelvic pain). | Baseline to Post-treatment assessment (2-week post-treatment) |
| Severity of symptoms related with central sensitization | To explore changes in symptoms related to central sensitization (Central Sensitization Inventory). Ranging from 0 to 100, a higher scores indicates higher central sensitivity. | Baseline to Post-treatment assessement (2-week post-treatment) |
| Satisfaction with treatment | To determine acceptability by measuring the participants' satisfaction with the treatment on a Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) ranging from 0 (completely dissatisfied) to 10 (complete satisfied). | Post-treatment assessment (2-week post-treatment) |
| Patient's global impression of change | To examine patient self-reported improvement (Patient's Global Impression of Change). Ranging from "very much worse" to "very much improved" on a 7-point scale. | Post-treatment assessment (2-week post-treatment) |
| Blinding effectiveness | To assess the feasibility of maintaining blinding to group allocation for the participants. Evaluated by asking the question: ''What treatment do you think you have received? '' | Post-treatment assessment (2-week post-treatment) |
| Changes in pelvic floor muscle stiffness | To explore changes in pelvic floor muscle stiffness (Shearwave elastography) | Baseline to Post-treatment assessment (2-week post-treatment) |
| Changes in pelvic floor muscle function | To explore changes in pelvic floor muscle function (Dynamometric speculum) | Baseline to Post-treatment assessment (2-week post-treatment) |
| Changes in pain at palpation | To explore changes at intravaginal palpation of the internal obturators and the levator ani muscles following a standardized procedure (Numerical Rating Scale). Ranging from 0 to 10, where 0 is no pain at all, and 10 is the worst pain ever. | Baseline to Post-treatment assessment (2-week post-treatment) |
| Changes in pressure pain threshold | To explore changes in pressure pain threshold if predetermined areas of the pelvis (Wagner algometer) | Baseline to Post-treatment assessment (2-week post-treatment) |
| D000091662 | Genital Diseases |
| D005832 | Genital Diseases, Male |
| D012735 | Sexual Dysfunction, Physiological |
| D052801 | Male Urogenital Diseases |
| D020018 | Sexual Dysfunctions, Psychological |
| D001523 | Mental Disorders |
| D014845 | Vulvar Diseases |