Health Psychology Section, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience, King's College, London, London, UK.
INPUT Pain Management Unit, NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.
Eur J Pain. 2021 Jan;25(1):39-50. doi: 10.1002/ejp.1668. Epub 2020 Oct 19.
Vulvodynia is a prevalent chronic vulval pain condition affecting 10%-28% of women, and significantly impacting their health and quality of life. It is currently poorly understood and biomedical treatments achieve only modest benefits for pain and sexual functioning. A wider psychosocial conceptualization of this condition may improve outcomes. There is currently no coherent understanding of how psychosocial factors may contribute to outcomes in Vulvodynia. The aim of this review is to identify and systematically review psychosocial factors associated with pain and sexual outcomes and to inform a psychosocial model of Vulvodynia.
Observational/experimental studies reporting on the association between psychosocial factors and pain/sexual outcomes in adult women with Vulvodynia were eligible. Two reviewers independently conducted eligibility screening, data extraction and quality assessment. Twenty-one studies were included, all focused on women with Provoked Vestibulodynia (PVD). Most of the studies were low-to-medium quality.
RESULTS/CONCLUSION: A range of general/pain-related distress and avoidance processes, and sex/intimacy avoidance or engagement processes were significantly associated with pain, sexual functioning or sexual distress and sexual satisfaction, supporting the role of a psychosocial approach to PVD. Depression, anxiety, catastrophizing, pain-anxiety, pain acceptance, body-exposure anxiety, attention to sexual cues, partner hostility and solicitousness, self-efficacy and penetration cognitions are highlighted as potentially important treatment targets in PVD. Due to the limited data available, developing a psychosocial model was not possible. Directions for future research include examining the replicability and generalizability of the factors identified, exploring differences/similarities across Vulvodynia subsets and testing tailored theoretically based treatments.
The systematic review highlights the role of psychosocial factors associated with pain and sexual functioning in Vulvodynia. The review findings reveal that Vulvodynia presents both similar and unique cognitive, behavioural and interpersonal features compared to other chronic pain conditions. There may be important roles for negative sexual cues, body image-related factors during intercourse, partner factors, self-efficacy beliefs and penetration cognitions, in relation to pain and sexual functioning.
外阴痛是一种常见的慢性外阴疼痛疾病,影响 10%-28%的女性,严重影响她们的健康和生活质量。目前对外阴痛的认识还很有限,生物医学治疗对疼痛和性功能仅有适度的改善。更广泛的心理社会概念化可能会改善结局。目前尚不清楚心理社会因素如何影响外阴痛的结局。本综述旨在确定和系统回顾与疼痛和性结局相关的心理社会因素,并为外阴痛的心理社会模型提供信息。
符合条件的研究为观察性/实验性研究,报告了外阴痛成年女性中与心理社会因素和疼痛/性结局相关的关联。两名审查员独立进行资格筛选、数据提取和质量评估。共纳入 21 项研究,均聚焦于有诱发外阴痛(PVD)的女性。大多数研究的质量为低到中等。
结果/结论:一系列一般/与疼痛相关的痛苦和回避过程,以及性/亲密回避或参与过程,与疼痛、性功能或性痛苦和性满意度显著相关,支持对 PVD 采用心理社会方法。抑郁、焦虑、灾难化、疼痛焦虑、疼痛接受、身体暴露焦虑、对性线索的关注、伴侣敌意和关心、自我效能感和插入认知,是 PVD 中潜在的重要治疗靶点。由于现有数据有限,无法建立心理社会模型。未来研究的方向包括检验已确定因素的可重复性和普遍性,探索外阴痛亚组之间的差异/相似性,以及测试基于理论的有针对性的治疗方法。
系统综述强调了与外阴痛疼痛和性功能相关的心理社会因素的作用。综述结果表明,外阴痛在认知、行为和人际关系方面与其他慢性疼痛疾病既有相似之处,也有独特之处。在疼痛和性功能方面,可能存在重要的作用,如负面的性线索、性交时的身体形象相关因素、伴侣因素、自我效能感信念和插入认知。