de Vos Andersen Nils-Bo, Kent Peter, Hjort Jakob, Christiansen David Høyrup
Primary Health Care and Quality Improvement, Viborg, Central Denmark Region, Denmark.
School of Physiotherapy and Exercise Science, Curtin University, Bentley, WA, Australia.
BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2017 Mar 29;18(1):130. doi: 10.1186/s12891-017-1487-3.
Danish patients with musculoskeletal disorders are commonly referred for primary care physiotherapy treatment but little is known about their general health status, pain diagnoses, clinical course and prognosis. The objectives of this study were to 1) describe the clinical course of patients with musculoskeletal disorders referred to physiotherapy, 2) identify predictors associated with a satisfactory outcome, and 3) determine the influence of the primary pain site diagnosis relative to those predictors.
This was a prospective cohort study of patients (n = 2,706) newly referred because of musculoskeletal pain to 30 physiotherapy practices from January 2012 to May 2012. Data were collected via a web-based questionnaire 1-2 days prior to the first physiotherapy consultation and at 6 weeks, 3 and 6 months, from clinical records (including primary musculoskeletal symptom diagnosis based on the ICPC-2 classification system), and from national registry data. The main outcome was the Patient Acceptable Symptom State. Potential predictors were analysed using backwards step-wise selection during longitudinal Generalised Estimating Equation regression modelling. To assess the influence of pain site on these associations, primary pain site diagnosis was added to the model.
Of the patients included, 66% were female and the mean age was 48 (SD 15). The percentage of patients reporting their symptoms as acceptable was 32% at 6 weeks, 43% at 3 months and 52% at 6 months. A higher probability of satisfactory outcome was associated with place of residence, being retired, no compensation claim, less frequent pain, shorter duration of pain, lower levels of disability and fear avoidance, better mental health and being a non-smoker. Primary pain site diagnosis had little influence on these associations, and was not predictive of a satisfactory outcome.
Only half of the patients rated their symptoms as acceptable at 6 months. Although satisfactory outcome was difficult to predict at an individual patient level, there were a number of prognostic factors that were associated with this outcome. These factors should be considered when developing generic prediction tools to assess the probability of satisfactory outcome in musculoskeletal physiotherapy patients, because the site of pain did not affect that prognostic association.
丹麦患有肌肉骨骼疾病的患者通常会被转介到初级保健物理治疗机构接受治疗,但对于他们的总体健康状况、疼痛诊断、临床病程和预后了解甚少。本研究的目的是:1)描述转介到物理治疗机构的肌肉骨骼疾病患者的临床病程;2)确定与满意结局相关的预测因素;3)确定原发性疼痛部位诊断相对于这些预测因素的影响。
这是一项前瞻性队列研究,研究对象为2012年1月至2012年5月因肌肉骨骼疼痛新转介到30家物理治疗机构的患者(n = 2706)。在首次物理治疗咨询前1 - 2天、6周、3个月和6个月时,通过基于网络的问卷、临床记录(包括基于ICPC - 2分类系统的原发性肌肉骨骼症状诊断)以及国家登记数据收集数据。主要结局是患者可接受的症状状态。在纵向广义估计方程回归建模过程中,使用向后逐步选择法分析潜在的预测因素。为了评估疼痛部位对这些关联的影响,将原发性疼痛部位诊断添加到模型中。
纳入的患者中,66%为女性,平均年龄为48岁(标准差15)。报告症状可接受的患者百分比在6周时为32%,3个月时为43%,6个月时为52%。满意结局的较高概率与居住地点、退休、无赔偿要求、疼痛频率较低、疼痛持续时间较短、残疾程度较低、恐惧回避程度较低、心理健康状况较好以及不吸烟有关。原发性疼痛部位诊断对这些关联影响不大,且不能预测满意结局。
在6个月时,只有一半的患者认为他们的症状可接受。尽管在个体患者层面难以预测满意结局,但有许多预后因素与该结局相关。在开发通用预测工具以评估肌肉骨骼物理治疗患者满意结局的可能性时,应考虑这些因素,因为疼痛部位并不影响该预后关联。