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      Assessment of chronic post-surgical pain after knee replacement: Development of a core outcome set

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          Abstract

          Background

          Approximately 20% of patients experience chronic post-surgical pain (CPSP) after total knee replacement (TKR). There is scope to improve assessment of CPSP after TKR, and this study aimed to develop a core outcome set.

          Methods

          Eighty patients and 43 clinicians were recruited into a three-round modified Delphi study. In Round 1, participants were presented with 56 pain features identified from a systematic review, structured interviews with patients and focus groups with clinicians. Participants assigned importance ratings, using a 1–9 scale, to individual pain features; those features rated as most important were retained in subsequent rounds. Consensus that a pain feature should be included in the core outcome set was defined as the feature having a rating of 7–9 by ≥70% of both panels (patients and clinicians) and 1–3 by ≤15% of both panels or rated as 7–9 by ≥90% of one panel.

          Results

          Round 1 was completed by 71 patients and 39 clinicians, and Round 3 by 62 patients and 33 clinicians. The final consensus was that 33 pain features were important. These were grouped into an 8-item core outcome set comprising: pain intensity, pain interference with daily living, pain and physical functioning, temporal aspects of pain, pain description, emotional aspects of pain, use of pain medication, and improvement and satisfaction with pain relief.

          Conclusions

          This core outcome set serves to guide assessment of CPSP after TKR. Consistency in assessment can promote standardized reporting and facilitate comparability between studies that address a common but understudied type of CPSP.

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          Most cited references31

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          Grading the severity of chronic pain.

          This research develops and evaluates a simple method of grading the severity of chronic pain for use in general population surveys and studies of primary care pain patients. Measures of pain intensity, disability, persistence and recency of onset were tested for their ability to grade chronic pain severity in a longitudinal study of primary care back pain (n = 1213), headache (n = 779) and temporomandibular disorder pain (n = 397) patients. A Guttman scale analysis showed that pain intensity and disability measures formed a reliable hierarchical scale. Pain intensity measures appeared to scale the lower range of global severity while disability measures appeared to scale the upper range of global severity. Recency of onset and days in pain in the prior 6 months did not scale with pain intensity or disability. Using simple scoring rules, pain severity was graded into 4 hierarchical classes: Grade I, low disability--low intensity; Grade II, low disability--high intensity; Grade III, high disability--moderately limiting; and Grade IV, high disability--severely limiting. For each pain site, Chronic Pain Grade measured at baseline showed a highly statistically significant and monotonically increasing relationship with unemployment rate, pain-related functional limitations, depression, fair to poor self-rated health, frequent use of opioid analgesics, and frequent pain-related doctor visits both at baseline and at 1-year follow-up. Days in Pain was related to these variables, but not as strongly as Chronic Pain Grade. Recent onset cases (first onset within the prior 3 months) did not show differences in psychological and behavioral dysfunction when compared to persons with less recent onset. Using longitudinal data from a population-based study (n = 803), Chronic Pain Grade at baseline predicted the presence of pain in the prior 2 weeks. Chronic Pain Grade and pain-related functional limitations at 3-year follow-up. Grading chronic pain as a function of pain intensity and pain-related disability may be useful when a brief ordinal measure of global pain severity is required. Pain persistence, measured by days in pain in a fixed time period, provides useful additional information.
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            Standardising outcomes for clinical trials and systematic reviews

            Introduction Fifteen years ago, what was to become OMERACT met for the first time in The Netherlands to discuss ways in which the multitude of outcomes in assessments of the effects of treatments for rheumatoid arthritis might be standardised. In Trials, Tugwell et al have described the need for, and success of, this initiative [1] and Cooney and colleagues have set out their plans for a corresponding initiative for ulcerative colitis [2]. Why do we need such initiatives? What's the problem? And are these and other initiatives the solution? What's the problem? Every year, millions of journal articles are added to the tens of millions that already exist in the health literature, and tens of millions of web pages are added to the hundreds of millions currently available. Within these, there are many tens of thousands of research studies which might provide the evidence needed to make well-informed decisions about health care. The task of working through all this material is overwhelming enough, without then finding that the studies of relevance to the decision you wish to make all describe their findings in different ways, making it difficult if not impossible to draw out the relevant information. Of course, you might be able to find a systematic review, but even then there is no guarantee that the authors of that review will not have been faced with an insurmountable task of bringing together and making sense of a variety of studies that used a variety of outcomes and outcome measures. These difficulties are great enough but the problem gets even worse when one considers the potential for bias. If researchers have measured a particular outcome in a variety of ways, (for example using different pain instruments filled in by different people at different times) they might not report all of their findings from all of these measures. Studies have highlighted this problem in clinical trials, showing that this selectivity in reporting is usually driven by a desire to present the most positive or statistically significant results [3]. This will mean that, where the original researcher had a choice, the reader of the clinical trial report might be presented with an overly optimistic estimate of the effect of an intervention and therefore be led towards the wrong decision. In the 1990s, the potential scale of the problem of multiple outcome measures was highlighted in mental health by a comprehensive descriptive account of randomised trials in the treatment of people with schizophrenia. Thornley and Adams identified a total of 2000 such trials, which had assessed more than 600 different interventions. However, these trials had included an even greater number of rating scales for mental health than the number of interventions: 640 [4]. The potential for biased reported and the challenges of comparing the findings of different trials of different interventions using different ways of measuring illness make the identification of effective, ineffective and unproven treatments for this condition especially difficult [5]. This is true whether the readers of the report of a clinical trial are trying to use it to inform their decisions, or whether they are trying to combine similar trials within a systematic review. Thornley and Adams, who had done the descriptive study of the large number of rating scales in mental health trials, were faced with this very problem in a review of chlorpromazine. They concluded that review with the following implications for research, "if rating scales are to be employed, a concerted effort should be made to agree on which measures are the most useful. Studies within this review reported on so many scales that, even if results had not been poorly reported, they would have been difficult to synthesise in a clinically meaningful way." [6]. What's the solution? If we want to choose the shortest of three routes between two towns, how would we cope if told that one is 10 kilometres and another is 8 miles? Doing that conversion between miles and kilometres might not be too much of a problem, but what if the third route was said to be 32 furlongs? Now, imagine that the measurements had all been taken in different ways. One came from walking the route with a measuring wheel, one from an estimate based on the time taken to ride a horse between the two towns and one from using a ruler on a map. To make a well informed choice we would want the distances to be available to us in the same units, measured in the same ways. Making decisions about health care should be no different. We want to compare and contrast research findings on the basis of the same outcomes, measured in the same ways. Achieving this is not straightforward, but it is not impossible. Key steps are to decide on the core outcome measures and, in some cases, the core baseline variables, and for these to then be included in the conduct and reporting of research studies. One of the earliest examples is an initiative by the World Health Organisation in the late 1970s, relating to cancer trials. Meetings on the Standardization of Reporting Results of Cancer Treatment took place in Turin (1977) and in Brussels two years later. More than 30 representatives from cooperative groups doing randomised trials in cancer came together and their discussions led to a WHO Handbook of guidelines on the minimal requirements for data collection in cancer trials [7,8]. OMERACT has also grown by trying to reach a consensus among major stakeholders in the field of rheumatology [1] and the IMMPACT recommendations for chronic pain trials have arisen in a similar way [9]. Other approaches have included the use of literature surveys to identify the variety of outcome measures that have been used and reported, followed by group discussion. This is the case with low back pain [10], colon cancer [11] and an e-Delhi survey in maternity care [12]. Having developed these lists of outcomes measures, researchers need to use them and systematic reviewers need to build their reviews around them. These sets of standardised outcomes measures are not meant to stifle the development and use of other outcomes. Rather, they provide a core set of outcome measures, which researchers should use routinely. Researchers wishing to add other outcome measures in the context of their own trial would continue to do so but, when reporting their trial, selective reporting should be avoided through the presentation of the findings for both the core set and all additional outcome measures they collected. Furthermore, the use of the outcome measures in these core sets should not be restricted to research studies. They are also relevant within routine practice. If they are collected within such practice, they would help the provider and the receiver of health care to assess their progress and facilitate their understanding of the relevance to them of the findings of research. Journals such as Trials can help by highlighting initiatives such as those discussed in rheumatology [1] and ulcerative colitis [2]. They should encourage researchers to report their findings for the outcome measures in the core sets, and provide them with the space to do so. This will allow readers and systematic reviewers to make best use of the reported trials. Conclusion When there are differences among the results of similar clinical trials, the fundamental issues of interest to people making decisions about health care are likely to concern the interventions that were tested, the types of patient in the study, or both; not the different outcome measure used. The latter is important but if one remembers that the studies were probably not done to assess differences between the various ways of measuring outcomes, but, rather, differences between the interventions, the benefits of consistency become obvious. Achieving consistency is not something that can be left to serendipity. It will require consensus, guidelines and adherence. The papers in Trials and others mentioned in this commentary show how this might happen. Competing interests I am the author of one of the papers on a core set of outcomes for healthcare research, which is cited in this paper.
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              Questionnaire on the perceptions of patients about total knee replacement.

              We have developed a 12-item questionnaire for patients having a total knee replacement (TKR). We made a prospective study of 117 patients before operation and at follow-up six months later, asking them to complete the new questionnaire and the form SF36. Some also filled in the Stanford Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ). An orthopaedic surgeon completed the American Knee Society (AKS) clinical score. The single score derived from the new questionnaire had high internal consistency, and its reproducibility, examined by test-retest reliability, was found to be satisfactory. Its validity was established by obtaining significant correlations in the expected direction with the AKS scores and the relevant parts of the SF36 and HAQ. Sensitivity to change was assessed by analysing the differences between the preoperative scores and those at follow-up. We also compared change in scores with the patients' retrospective judgement of change in their condition. The effect size for the new questionnaire compared favourably with those for the relevant parts of the SF36. The change scores for the new knee questionnaire were significantly greater (p < 0.0001) for patients who reported the most improvement in their condition. The new questionnaire provides a measure of outcome for TKR that is short, practical, reliable, valid and sensitive to clinically important changes over time.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Eur J Pain
                Eur J Pain
                ejp
                European Journal of Pain (London, England)
                BlackWell Publishing Ltd (Oxford, UK )
                1090-3801
                1532-2149
                May 2015
                25 August 2014
                : 19
                : 5
                : 611-620
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Musculoskeletal Research Unit, School of Clinical Sciences, Southmead Hospital Bristol, UK
                [2 ]Warwick Clinical Trials Unit, University of Warwick Coventry, UK
                Author notes
                Correspondence Vikki Wylde, E-mail: V.Wylde@ 123456bristol.ac.uk

                Funding sources This article presents independent research funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) under its Programme Development Grants scheme (Reference Number: RP-DG-1211-10002). The views expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR or the Department of Health. The research team acknowledge the support of the NIHR, through the Comprehensive Clinical Research Network.

                Conflicts of interest None declared.

                Article
                10.1002/ejp.582
                4409075
                25154614
                c3d768be-d1b9-4dac-aeba-561e72a2a23a
                © 2014 The Authors. European Journal of Pain published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Pain Federation - EFIC®.

                This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 07 July 2014
                Categories
                New Research

                Anesthesiology & Pain management
                Anesthesiology & Pain management

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