Department of Health Professions, Faculty of Medicine, Health and Human Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
THRIVE Physiotherapy, Guernsey, Channel Islands.
Pain Med. 2021 Apr 20;22(4):915-947. doi: 10.1093/pm/pnaa363.
This systematic review aimed to 1) assess associations between psychological factors and pain after breast cancer (BC) treatment and 2) determine which preoperative psychological factors predicted pain in the acute, subacute, and chronic time frames after BC surgery.
A systematic review with meta-analysis.
Women with early-stage BC.
The Medline, EMBASE, CINAHL, and Web of Science databases were searched between 1990 and January 2019. Studies that evaluated psychological factors and pain after surgery for early-stage BC were included. Associations between psychological factors and pain, from early after surgery to >12 months after surgery, were extracted. Effect size correlations (r equivalents) were calculated and pooled by using random-effects meta-analysis models.
Of 4,137 studies, 47 were included (n = 15,987 participants; 26 studies ≤12 months after surgery and 22 studies >12 months after surgery). The majority of the studies had low to moderate risk of bias. Higher preoperative anxiety and depression were weak but significant predictors of pain at all time points up to 12 months (r equivalent: 0.15-0.22). Higher preoperative pain catastrophizing and distress were also weak but significant predictors of pain during the acute (0-7 days) and chronic (3-12 months) periods (r equivalent: 0.10-0.20). For the period >12 months after surgery, weak but significant cross-sectional associations with pain were identified for anxiety, depression, pain catastrophizing, and distress (r equivalents: 0.15, 0.17, 0.25, 0.14, respectively).
Significant pooled effect size correlations between psychological factors and pain were identified across all time frames. Though weak, these associations should encourage assessment of key psychological factors during preoperative screening and pain assessments at all postoperative time frames.
本系统评价旨在:1)评估乳腺癌(BC)治疗后心理因素与疼痛之间的关系;2)确定哪些术前心理因素可预测 BC 手术后急性、亚急性和慢性时期的疼痛。
系统评价和荟萃分析。
早期 BC 女性。
1990 年至 2019 年 1 月期间,对 Medline、EMBASE、CINAHL 和 Web of Science 数据库进行了检索。纳入评估早期 BC 手术后心理因素与疼痛的研究。提取了从手术后早期到 >12 个月后手术的心理因素与疼痛之间的关联。使用随机效应荟萃分析模型计算和汇总效应大小相关系数(r 等效值)。
在 4137 项研究中,有 47 项研究(n=15987 名参与者;26 项研究在手术后 12 个月内,22 项研究在手术后 >12 个月)符合纳入标准。大多数研究的偏倚风险为低到中度。术前较高的焦虑和抑郁是所有时间点疼痛的弱但显著预测因素,直到 12 个月(r 等效值:0.15-0.22)。术前较高的疼痛灾难化和痛苦也是急性(0-7 天)和慢性(3-12 个月)疼痛的弱但显著预测因素(r 等效值:0.10-0.20)。对于手术后 >12 个月的时间点,发现焦虑、抑郁、疼痛灾难化和痛苦与疼痛之间存在弱但显著的横断面关联(r 等效值分别为 0.15、0.17、0.25、0.14)。
在所有时间点都发现了心理因素与疼痛之间存在显著的汇总效应大小相关性。尽管相关性较弱,但这些关联应鼓励在术前筛查和所有术后时间点的疼痛评估中评估关键心理因素。