Lentz Trevor A, George Steven Z, Manickas-Hill Olivia, Malay Morven R, O'Donnell Jonathan, Jayakumar Prakash, Jiranek William, Mather Richard C
T. A. Lentz, S. Z. George, R. C. Mather, Duke Clinical Research Institute at Duke University, Durham NC, USA.
T. A. Lentz, S. Z. George, W. Jiranek, R. C. Mather, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Duke University, Durham NC, USA.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2020 Dec;478(12):2768-2783. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000001520.
Psychological distress can negatively influence disability, quality of life, and treatment outcomes for individuals with hip and knee osteoarthritis (OA). Clinical practice guidelines recommend a comprehensive disease management approach to OA that includes the identification, evaluation, and management of psychological distress. However, uncertainty around the best psychological screening and assessment methods, a poor understanding of the heterogeneity of psychological distress in those with OA, and lack of guidance on how to scale treatment have limited the growth of OA care models that effectively address individual psychological needs.
QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: (1) Across which general and pain-related psychological distress constructs do individuals seeking conservative care for hip or knee OA report higher scores than the general population of individuals seeking conservative care for musculoskeletal pain conditions? (2) What common psychological phenotypes exist among nonsurgical care-seeking individuals with hip or knee OA?
The sample included participants from the Duke Joint Health Program (n = 1239), a comprehensive hip and knee OA care program, and the Optimal Screening for Prediction of Referral and Outcome (OSPRO) cohort studies (n = 871) comprising individuals seeking conservative care for knee, shoulder, low back, or neck pain. At the initial evaluation, patients completed the OSPRO Yellow Flag (OSPRO-YF) Assessment Tool, which assesses 11 general and pain-related psychological distress constructs (depression, anxiety, fear of movement, self-efficacy for managing one's own pain). We used OSPRO-YF scores to compare levels of psychological distress between the cohorts. Cohen's d effect sizes were calculated to determine the magnitude of differences between the groups, with d = 0.20, d = 0.50, and d = 0.80 indicating small, medium, and large effect sizes, respectively. We used a latent class analysis to derive psychological distress phenotypes in people with OA based on the 11 OSPRO-YF psychological distress indicators. Psychological distress phenotypes are characterized by specific mood, belief, and behavioral factors that differentiate subgroups within a population. Phenotyping can help providers develop scalable treatment pathways that are better tailored to the common needs of patients.
Patients with OA demonstrated higher levels of general and pain-related psychological distress across all psychological constructs except for trait anxiety (that is, anxiety level as a personal characteristic rather than as a response to a stressful situation, like surgery) with small-to-moderate effect sizes. Characteristics with the largest effect sizes in the OA and overall OSPRO cohort were (Cohen's d) general anxiety (-0.66, lower in the OA cohort), pain catastrophizing (the tendency to ruminate over, maginfiy, or feel helpless about a pain experience, 0.47), kinesiophobia (pain-related fear of movement, 0.46), pain self-efficacy (confidence in one's own ability to manage his or her pain, -0.46, lower in the OA cohort), and self-efficacy for rehabilitation (confidence in one's own ability to perform their rehabilitation treatments, -0.44, lower in the OA cohort). The latent class analysis yielded four phenotypes (% sample): high distress (52%, 647 of 1239), low distress (26%, 322 of 1239), low self-efficacy and acceptance (low confidence in managing and willingness to accept pain) (15%, 186 of 1239), and negative pain coping (exhibiting poor pain coping skills) (7%, 84 of 1239). The classification error rate was near zero (2%), and the median of posterior probabilities used to assign subgroup membership was 0.99 (interquartile range 0.98 to 1.00), both indicating excellent model performance. The high-distress group had the lowest mean age (61 ± 11 years) and highest levels of pain intensity (6 ± 2) and disability (HOOS JR: 50 ± 15; KOOS JR: 47 ± 15), whereas the low-distress group had the highest mean age (63 ± 10 years) and lowest levels of pain (4 ± 2) and disability (HOOS JR: 63 ± 15; KOOS JR: 60 ± 12). However, none of these differences met or exceeded anchor-based minimal clinically important difference thresholds.
General and pain-related psychological distress are common among individuals seeking comprehensive care for hip or knee OA. Predominant existing OA care models that focus on biomedical interventions, such as corticosteroid injection or joint replacement that are designed to directly address underlying joint pathology and inflammation, may be inadequate to fully meet the care-related needs of many patients with OA due to their underlying psychological distress. We believe this because biomedical interventions do not often address psychological characteristics, which are known to influence OA-related pain and disability independent of joint pathology. Healthcare providers can develop new comprehensive hip and knee OA treatment pathways tailored to these phenotypes where services such as pain coping skills training, relaxation training, and psychological therapies are delivered to patients who exhibit phenotypes characterized by high distress or negative pain coping. Future studies should evaluate whether tailoring treatment to specific psychological phenotypes yields better clinical outcomes than nontailored treatments, or treatments that have a more biomedical focus.
Level III, diagnostic study.
心理困扰会对髋膝关节骨关节炎(OA)患者的残疾状况、生活质量及治疗效果产生负面影响。临床实践指南推荐采用综合疾病管理方法来治疗OA,其中包括对心理困扰的识别、评估和管理。然而,最佳心理筛查和评估方法尚不确定,对OA患者心理困扰的异质性了解不足,且缺乏如何调整治疗方案的指导,这些都限制了能有效满足个体心理需求的OA护理模式的发展。
问题/目的:(1)寻求髋或膝关节OA保守治疗的患者,在哪些一般和与疼痛相关的心理困扰结构上的得分高于寻求肌肉骨骼疼痛疾病保守治疗的普通人群?(2)寻求髋或膝关节OA非手术治疗的患者中存在哪些常见的心理表型?
样本包括来自杜克关节健康项目(n = 1239)的参与者,这是一个综合的髋膝关节OA护理项目,以及最佳转诊与结果预测筛查(OSPRO)队列研究(n = 871)的参与者,这些参与者包括寻求膝关节、肩关节、下背部或颈部疼痛保守治疗的个体。在初始评估时,患者完成了OSPRO黄旗(OSPRO - YF)评估工具,该工具评估11种一般和与疼痛相关的心理困扰结构(抑郁、焦虑、运动恐惧、自我管理疼痛的效能感)。我们使用OSPRO - YF得分来比较各队列之间的心理困扰水平。计算科恩d效应量以确定组间差异的大小,d = 0.20、d = 0.50和d = 0.80分别表示小、中、大效应量。我们基于11个OSPRO - YF心理困扰指标,使用潜在类别分析来推导OA患者的心理困扰表型。心理困扰表型的特征是特定的情绪、信念和行为因素,这些因素可区分人群中的亚组。表型分析有助于医疗服务提供者制定更适合患者共同需求的可扩展治疗路径。
除特质焦虑(即作为个人特征而非对压力情境如手术的反应的焦虑水平)外,OA患者在所有心理结构上均表现出更高水平的一般和与疼痛相关的心理困扰,效应量为小到中等。在OA队列和整个OSPRO队列中效应量最大的特征为(科恩d):一般焦虑(-0.66,OA队列中较低)、疼痛灾难化(对疼痛经历反复思考、放大或感到无助的倾向,0.47)、运动恐惧(与疼痛相关的运动恐惧,0.46)、疼痛自我效能感(对自己管理疼痛能力的信心,-0.46,OA队列中较低)以及康复自我效能感(对自己进行康复治疗能力的信心,-0.44,OA队列中较低)。潜在类别分析产生了四种表型(样本百分比):高度困扰(52%,1239例中的647例)、低度困扰(26%,1239例中的322例)、低自我效能感与接受度(管理疼痛的信心低且愿意接受疼痛)(15%,1239例中的186例)以及消极疼痛应对(表现出较差的疼痛应对技能)(7%,1239例中的84例)。分类错误率接近零(2%),用于分配亚组成员身份的后验概率中位数为0.99(四分位间距0.98至1.00),这两者均表明模型性能优异。高度困扰组的平均年龄最低(61±11岁),疼痛强度(6±2)和残疾程度最高(髋关节损伤和骨关节炎疗效评分简表:50±15;膝关节损伤和骨关节炎疗效评分简表:47±15),而低度困扰组的平均年龄最高(63±10岁),疼痛(4±2)和残疾程度最低(髋关节损伤和骨关节炎疗效评分简表:63±15;膝关节损伤和骨关节炎疗效评分简表:60±12)。然而,这些差异均未达到或超过基于锚定的最小临床重要差异阈值。
在寻求髋或膝关节OA综合护理的个体中,一般和与疼痛相关的心理困扰很常见。现有的主要OA护理模式侧重于生物医学干预,如皮质类固醇注射或关节置换,旨在直接解决潜在的关节病理和炎症问题,但由于患者潜在的心理困扰,可能不足以完全满足许多OA患者的护理相关需求。我们这样认为是因为生物医学干预通常不涉及心理特征,而心理特征已知会独立于关节病理影响与OA相关的疼痛和残疾。医疗服务提供者可以针对这些表型开发新的综合髋膝关节OA治疗路径,为表现出高度困扰或消极疼痛应对特征表型的患者提供疼痛应对技能培训、放松训练和心理治疗等服务。未来研究应评估针对特定心理表型调整治疗方案是否比未调整的治疗方案或更侧重于生物医学的治疗方案产生更好的临床结果。
III级,诊断性研究。