Design of the COMEBACK and BACKHOME Studies, Longitudinal Cohorts for Comprehensive Deep Phenotyping of Adults with Chronic Low-Back Pain (cLBP): a part of the BACPAC Research Program
Trisha F. Hue, Jeffrey C. Lotz, Patricia Zheng, Dennis M. Black, Jeannie Bailey, Susan K. Ewing, Aaron J. Fields, Wolf Mehling, Aaron Scheffler, Irina Strigo, Thomas Petterson, Lucy A. Wu, Conor O’Neill, The UCSF REACH Center, the CoRe CEnter for PAtient-Centric Mechanistic PHenotyping in Chronic Low Back Pain
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective The University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) Core Center for Patient-centric, Mechanistic Phenotyping in Chronic Low Back Pain (REACH) is one of the three NIH Back Pain Consortium (BACPAC) Research Programs Mechanistic Research Centers (MRCs). The goal of UCSF REACH is to define cLBP phenotypes and pain mechanisms that can lead to effective, personalized treatments for patients across the population. The primary objective of this research project is to address the critical need for new diagnostic and prognostic markers, and associated patient classification protocols for chronic low back pain (cLBP) treatment.