Rabbitts Jennifer A, Groenewald Cornelius B, Tai Gabrielle G, Palermo Tonya M
Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington; Seattle Children's Research Institute, Seattle, Washington.
Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington; Seattle Children's Research Institute, Seattle, Washington.
J Pain. 2015 Mar;16(3):226-34. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2014.11.015. Epub 2014 Dec 22.
Limited research has examined presurgical risk factors for poor outcomes in children after major surgery. This longitudinal study examined presurgical psychosocial and behavioral factors as predictors of acute postsurgical pain intensity and health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in children 2 weeks after major surgery. Sixty children aged 10 to 18 years, 66.7% female, and their parent/guardian participated in the study. Children underwent baseline assessment of pain (daily electronic diary), HRQOL, sleep (actigraphy), and psychosocial factors (anxiety, pain catastrophizing). Caregivers reported on parental pain catastrophizing. Longitudinal follow-up assessment of pain and HRQOL was conducted at home 2 weeks after surgery. Regression analyses adjusting for baseline pain revealed that presurgery sleep duration (β = -.26, P < .05) and parental pain catastrophizing (β = .28, P < .05) were significantly associated with mean pain intensity reported by children 2 weeks after surgery, with shorter presurgery sleep duration and greater parental catastrophizing about child pain predicting greater pain intensity. Adjusting for baseline HRQOL, presurgery child state anxiety (β = -.29, P < .05) was significantly associated with HRQOL at 2 weeks, with greater anxiety predicting poorer HRQOL after surgery. In conclusion, child anxiety, parental pain catastrophizing, and sleep patterns are potentially modifiable factors that predict poor outcomes in children after major surgery.
This study addresses an important gap in literature, examining presurgical risk factors for poorer acute postsurgical outcomes in children undergoing major surgery. Knowledge of these factors will enable presurgical identification of children at risk for poorer outcomes and guide further research developing prevention and intervention strategies for these children.
针对儿童大手术后预后不良的术前危险因素进行研究的较少。这项纵向研究调查了术前心理社会和行为因素,作为儿童大手术后2周急性术后疼痛强度和健康相关生活质量(HRQOL)的预测指标。60名年龄在10至18岁的儿童(66.7%为女性)及其父母/监护人参与了研究。对儿童进行了疼痛(每日电子日记)、HRQOL、睡眠(活动记录仪)和心理社会因素(焦虑、疼痛灾难化)的基线评估。照顾者报告了父母的疼痛灾难化情况。术后2周在家中对疼痛和HRQOL进行纵向随访评估。对基线疼痛进行调整的回归分析显示,术前睡眠时间(β = -0.26,P < 0.05)和父母的疼痛灾难化(β = 0.28,P < 0.05)与儿童术后2周报告的平均疼痛强度显著相关,术前睡眠时间较短和父母对儿童疼痛的灾难化程度较高预示着疼痛强度更大。对基线HRQOL进行调整后,术前儿童状态焦虑(β = -0.29,P < 0.05)与2周时的HRQOL显著相关,焦虑程度越高预示着术后HRQOL越差。总之,儿童焦虑、父母的疼痛灾难化和睡眠模式是可潜在改变的因素,可预测儿童大手术后的不良预后。
本研究填补了文献中的一个重要空白,研究了接受大手术儿童术后急性预后较差的术前危险因素。了解这些因素将有助于术前识别预后较差风险的儿童,并指导进一步研究为这些儿童制定预防和干预策略。