Electrical nerve stimulation reduces fibromyalgia movement pain
Adding transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation to outpatient physical therapy reduced pain during movement by a clinically meaningful amount at 2 months, with benefit maintained through 6 months.
*Cluster randomized clinical trial; Level 1b (OCEBM).
Citation
Dailey DL, Vance CGT, VanGorp BJ, et al. Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation and pain with movement in people with fibromyalgia: a cluster randomized clinical trial. JAMA Network Open. 2026;9(3):e262450. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2026.2450. Trial registration: NCT04683042.
Background
Fibromyalgia often causes pain that worsens with activity, which can limit participation in exercise-based care. Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation is a low-cost, non-drug option used to reduce pain, but its real-world benefit alongside routine physical therapy has been uncertain.
Patients
Adults older than 18 years with clinician-diagnosed fibromyalgia from 28 outpatient physical therapy clinics (6 health systems). Excluded: contraindications to electrical nerve stimulation or use within the prior 30 days; unable to read English.
Intervention
Routine outpatient physical therapy plus transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (2 hours daily during activity; upper and lower back placement).
Control
Routine outpatient physical therapy alone for 60 days (then received electrical nerve stimulation after day 60).
Outcome
Primary: change in pain during movement (0–10 scale) during a repeated sit-to-stand task at day 60. Key secondary: patient-rated overall improvement; adverse events.
Follow-up Period
Primary endpoint: 60 days; total follow-up: 180 days.
Results
Modified intention-to-treat population: 384 participants (mean age 53 years; 91% female).
| Outcome (day 60) |
Effect of adding electrical nerve stimulation |
| Pain during movement (primary) |
Mean difference −1.2 points (95% CI, −1.6 to −0.7) on a 0–10 scale |
| Overall improvement reported by patients |
Relative chance 1.41; NNT 5 |
| ≥30% reduction in pain during movement |
Relative chance 3.15; NNT 4 |
NNT = number needed to treat.
No serious adverse events related to electrical nerve stimulation; 30% reported minor side effects (mainly skin irritation or discomfort).
Limitations
Clinics (not individuals) were randomized, and participants were not blinded. After 60 days, the control group also received electrical nerve stimulation, limiting long-term between-group comparisons. The sample was mostly female and White, which may limit generalizability.
Funding
National Institutes of Health HEAL Initiative and related NIH centers.
Clinical Application
For fibromyalgia patients limited by activity pain, consider adding transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation during physical therapy and home activity; expect meaningful pain reduction with few serious harms.