Smith Wally R, Bovbjerg Viktor E, Penberthy Lynne T, McClish Donna K, Levenson James L, Roberts John D, Gil Karen, Roseff Susan D, Aisiku Imoigele P
Virginia Commonwealth University, Division of Quality Health Care, Box 980306, Richmond, VA 23298, USA.
J Natl Med Assoc. 2005 Feb;97(2):183-93.
Until recent decades, sickle cell disease (SCD) was associated with recurrent, disabling pain, organ failure and death in childhood or early adulthood. SCD treatment advances have now decreased pain and prolonged survival, but episodic or chronic pain may still require substantial analgesic use and frequent hospitalization for pain episodes. This pain is poorly characterized and often poorly treated. Adult patients may face barriers to comprehensive SCD care, stigmatization of their care-seeking behavior by providers and lack of family support, forcing them into maladaptive coping strategies. The Pain in Sickle Cell Epidemiology Study (PiSCES) attempts to develop and validate a biopsychosocial model of SCD pain, pain response and healthcare utilization in a large, multisite adult cohort. PiSCES participants complete a baseline survey and six months of daily pain diaries in which they record levels of SCD-related pain and related disability and distress as well as responses to pain (e.g., medication use, hospital visits). PiSCES will advance methods of measuring pain and pain response in SCD by better describing home-managed as well as provider-managed pain. PiSCES will assess the relative contributions of biological (disease-related), psychosocial and environmental (readiness to utilize) factors to overall pain and pain response in SCD, suggesting targets for biobehavioral interventions over time. Importantly, PiSCES will also identify "triggers" of SCD pain episodes and healthcare utilization in the moment of pain, suggesting targets for timely care that mutes pain episodes.
直到最近几十年,镰状细胞病(SCD)还与反复出现的、使人丧失能力的疼痛、器官衰竭以及儿童期或成年早期的死亡相关。如今,SCD治疗的进展已减轻了疼痛并延长了生存期,但发作性或慢性疼痛可能仍需要大量使用镇痛药,且因疼痛发作需要频繁住院治疗。这种疼痛的特征描述不清,治疗往往也不到位。成年患者在获得全面的SCD护理方面可能面临障碍,医疗服务提供者会污名化他们寻求治疗的行为,且缺乏家庭支持,这迫使他们采取适应不良的应对策略。镰状细胞病疼痛流行病学研究(PiSCES)试图在一个大型多中心成年队列中开发并验证一个关于SCD疼痛、疼痛反应及医疗保健利用的生物心理社会模型。PiSCES的参与者要完成一项基线调查以及为期六个月的每日疼痛日记,在日记中记录与SCD相关的疼痛程度、相关残疾和痛苦,以及对疼痛的反应(如药物使用、就医情况)。PiSCES将通过更好地描述家庭管理和医疗服务提供者管理的疼痛,改进测量SCD疼痛及疼痛反应的方法。PiSCES将评估生物学(与疾病相关)、心理社会和环境(利用意愿)因素对SCD总体疼痛和疼痛反应的相对贡献,随着时间推移为生物行为干预提供目标。重要的是,PiSCES还将在疼痛发生时识别SCD疼痛发作和医疗保健利用的“触发因素”,为及时缓解疼痛发作的护理提供目标。