Macfarlane Gary J, Beasley Marcus, Smith Blair H, Jones Gareth T, Macfarlane Tatiana V
Musculoskeletal Research Collaboration (Epidemiology Group), Institute of Applied Health Sciences, The School of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK.
Division of Population Health Sciences, School of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Dundee, Dundee, UK.
Br J Pain. 2015 Nov;9(4):203-12. doi: 10.1177/2049463715569806.
Biobank-type studies are typically large but have very low participation rates. It has been suggested that these studies may provide biased estimates of prevalence but are likely to provide valid estimates of association. We test these hypotheses using data collected on pain in a large Biobank study in the United Kingdom.
UK Biobank recruited 503,325 persons aged 40-69 years (participation rate 5.5%). Participants completed questionnaires, including pain, lifestyle and environment factors. As a comparison, we used both a large population study of pain (MUSICIAN: n = 8847, aged: 40-69 years) conducted 2008-2009 and the National Child Development study (NCDS) which recruited all persons in Great Britain born during one week of 1958 and followed them up at age 44 years (n = 9377).
'Any pain' (UK Biobank 61.0%; MUSICIAN 63.9%), chronic pain (42.9%, 52.2%) and site-specific musculoskeletal pain (back 26.2%, 29.7%; shoulder/neck 23.3%, 25.3%) were generally similar in UK Biobank and MUSICIAN. The prevalence of chronic pain and most regional musculoskeletal pains in UK Biobank were all within 2% of that in NCDS.
UK Biobank has provided estimates of the prevalence of pain which are similar to those from previous large-scale studies, although a formal comparison of the estimates cannot be made. It has also confirmed known associations with the reporting of pain. Despite its very low participation rate, such a study provides the opportunity to investigate novel exposure-pain relationships and investigate rarer exposures and characteristics to further our knowledge of the epidemiology of pain.
生物样本库类型的研究通常规模较大,但参与率极低。有人提出,这些研究可能会对患病率提供有偏差的估计,但可能会对关联性提供有效的估计。我们利用在英国一项大型生物样本库研究中收集的有关疼痛的数据来检验这些假设。
英国生物样本库招募了503325名年龄在40 - 69岁之间的人(参与率为5.5%)。参与者完成了问卷调查,包括疼痛、生活方式和环境因素。作为比较,我们使用了2008 - 2009年进行的一项关于疼痛的大型人群研究(音乐家研究:n = 8847,年龄:40 - 69岁)以及全国儿童发展研究(NCDS),该研究招募了1958年某一周内在英国出生的所有人,并在他们44岁时对其进行随访(n = 9377)。
“任何疼痛”(英国生物样本库为61.0%;音乐家研究为