Skip to content

Internet-delivered mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (iMBCT) for chronic pain symptom management in adults: A pilot randomized controlled trial.

Ingrid Bindicsova, Leanne M Hides, Katherine Brain, Fiona J Hodson, Paul Jackson, Mark P Jensen, Dawn M Ehde, Melissa A Day

The journal of pain July 1, 2025 DOI: 10.1016/j.jpain.2025.105429 via PubMed

Summary

A 4-week internet-delivered mindfulness-based cognitive therapy program for chronic pain was tested against a delayed-treatment control in 48 adults. High engagement and an 88% retention rate indicated the program was acceptable and feasible. Pain interference showed a small-to-medium improvement, while pain intensity change was small. Other secondary outcomes also showed small-to-medium improvements. The program may help overcome access barriers to pain management.

Study at a glance

Characteristics Pilot randomized controlled trial Preregistered Peer reviewed
Sample size 48
Population Adults with chronic pain
Keywords Chronic pain Feasibility Internet-delivered Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy
Citations 1
Key finding Internet-delivered mindfulness-based cognitive therapy is feasible, acceptable, and may improve pain interference in adults with chronic pain.

Abstract

The purpose of this pilot randomized controlled trial was to examine the feasibility of an internet delivered, self-directed mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (iMBCT) program compared to a delayed treatment (DT) control. This trial employed a 2-group parallel (1:1), design and was pre-registered (ANZCTR Identifier: 12623000833662). Participants were N = 48 adults with chronic pain, randomized into either the 4-week iMBCT program or the DT control. The feasibility indicators were treatment engagement, study retention, treatment acceptability, and at least a small within-condition pre- to post-treatment effect size change in pain intensity or interference. The primary outcome was change in pain intensity, and secondary outcomes were pain interference, depression, sleep disturbance, and positive and negative affect at post-treatment/DT (primary endpoint). A high degree of engagement with iMBCT was found, with participants reporting it acceptable and of benefit; retention rate (88%) was high. Within iMBCT, a small-to-medium effect size improvement in pain interference (p =.031, d = 0.48) was found, and change in pain intensity was small (p =.347, d =.20). Small-to-medium changes were found for the other secondary outcomes within iMBCT. Small-to-less than small effect sizes were observed within DT. These preliminary findings indicate iMBCT is a feasible, tolerable, and acceptable treatment for chronic pain, and may result in meaningful improvements in pain interference. Taken together, the results suggest iMBCT may have the capacity to overcome access barriers and provide individuals with chronic pain a much needed, evidence-based treatment to enhance pain self-management. PERSPECTIVE: This article presents the feasibility findings of an internet delivered, self-directed mindfulness-based cognitive therapy for chronic pain program. This novel digital platform may represent a scalable solution to increase access to critically needed chronic pain management services.

Comments

No comments yet.

Log in to comment