%0 Journal Article %@ 1929-0748 %I JMIR Publications %V 14 %N %P e66335 %T Resource-Oriented Case Management to Implement Recommendations for Patients With Chronic Pain and Frequent Use of Analgesics in General Practices (Project RELIEF): Protocol for a Single-Arm Exploratory Feasibility Study %A Poß-Doering,Regina %A Brinkmöller,Sabrina %A Balzer,Alexandra %A Wurmbach,Viktoria Sophie %A Paul,Cinara %A Stolz,Regina %A Zugaj,Marco Richard %A Tesarz,Jonas %A Wensing,Michel %A Straßner,Cornelia %+ Department of Primary Care and Health Services Research, Medical Faculty, Heidelberg University, University Hospital Heidelberg, Im Neuenheimer Feld 130.3, Heidelberg, 69120, Germany, 49 622156 ext 38643, regina.poss-doering@med.uni-heidelberg.de %K chronic noncancer pain %K case management %K primary care %K general practice resource-oriented %K chronic pain %K analgesics %K pharmacological treatment %K pain medications %K holistic approach %K feasibility %K single-arm %K exploratory %K pilot study %K screening %K questionnaire %K survey %K protocol %D 2025 %7 15.4.2025 %9 Protocol %J JMIR Res Protoc %G English %X Background: Chronic noncancer pain (CNCP) is a frequent reason for counseling in general practice. Current German guidelines emphasize its biopsychosocial etiology and the importance of self-care and nonpharmacological treatment strategies such as education, physical and social activity, and psychological approaches. Comprehensive assessments are necessary to individualize treatment maximally and monitor appropriate use of pain medication. General practitioners face many challenges in implementing holistic pain management, which considers biological, psychological, and social aspects. In project RELIEF (resource-oriented case management to implement recommendations for patients with chronic pain and frequent use of analgesics in general practices), a case management program was developed to facilitate implementation of guideline recommendations on pain management regarding medical assessment and monitoring, patient and practice team education, promotion of self-care strategies, and rational pharmacotherapy. Objective: We evaluated the feasibility of the intervention and study procedures before applying them in a larger cluster randomized controlled trial. Our secondary objective is to estimate potential effects of the complex intervention. Methods: A single-arm trial with general practices and patients with CNCP and analgesics use will be conducted, accompanied by a mixed methods process evaluation. The intervention comprises 5 components, including software-supported medical pain history, 3 scheduled structured appointments, e-learning on CNCP for general practitioners and medical assistants, educational material for patients, toolbox with information on (regional) resources for patients and practice teams. Participating practices will be located in the federal state of Baden-Württemberg, Germany, and will recruit eligible patients (adults with CNCP for more than 3 months, with at least moderate pain-related disability, permanent or on-demand use of analgesics or co-analgesics in the previous 4 weeks, and practice team assessed ability to participate actively in the trial). A questionnaire given to the first 150 adult patients entering the practice in February 2025 will help screen eligible patients. The primary objective will be measured by a set of predefined indicators. The key secondary outcome is pain-related disability measured by the Pain Disability Index German version. All participants will be asked to participate in the process evaluation. Outcome evaluation data will be gathered by paper-based and digitally provided questionnaires to be completed by participants. Process evaluation data will be gathered in surveys and a qualitative study. Descriptive analyses will be performed. Results: Recruitment occurred between October and December 2024. Targeted sample size was 6 practices and 50 patients. The intervention period will be February-June 2025. It is expected that eligible patients will benefit from the intervention and that improved medication management and intensified use of nonpharmacological treatment strategies will reduce pain-related disabilities and other patient-reported outcomes. Conclusions: This study will provide valuable information regarding feasibility and potential effects before testing the intervention in a confirmatory cluster randomized controlled trial. Trial Registration: German Clinical Trials Register DRKS00034831; https://www.drks.de/search/de/trial/DRKS00034831 International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID): PRR1-10.2196/66335 %R 10.2196/66335 %U https://www.researchprotocols.org/2025/1/e66335 %U https://doi.org/10.2196/66335