Division of Epidemiology, Department of Population and Quantitative Health Sciences, University of Massachusetts Medical School, 368 Plantation Street, Worcester, MA, 01605, USA.
BMC Med Res Methodol. 2021 Jun 26;21(1):132. doi: 10.1186/s12874-021-01327-5.
Despite experimental evidence suggesting that pain sensitivity is not impaired by cognitive impairment, observational studies in nursing home residents have observed an inverse association between cognitive impairment and resident-reported or staff-assessed pain. Under the hypothesis that the inverse association may be partially attributable to differential misclassification due to recall and communication limitations, this study implemented a missing data approach to quantify the absolute magnitude of misclassification of pain, pain frequency, and pain intensity by level of cognitive impairment.
Using the 2016 Minimum Data Set 3.0, we conducted a cross-sectional study among newly admitted US nursing home residents. Pain presence, severity, and frequency is assessed via resident-reported measures. For residents unable to communicate their pain, nursing home staff document pain based on direct resident observation and record review. We estimate a counterfactual expected level of pain in the absence of cognitive impairment by multiply imputing modified pain indicators for which the values were retained for residents with no/mild cognitive impairment and set to missing for residents with moderate/severe cognitive impairment. Absolute differences (∆) in the presence and magnitude of pain were calculated as the difference between documented pain and the expected level of pain.
The difference between observed and expected resident reported pain was greater in residents with severe cognitive impairment (∆ = -10.2%, 95% Confidence Interval (CI): -10.9% to -9.4%) than those with moderate cognitive impairment (∆ = -4.5%, 95% CI: -5.4% to -3.6%). For staff-assessed pain, the magnitude of apparent underreporting was similar between residents with moderate impairment (∆ = -7.2%, 95% CI: -8.3% to -6.0%) and residents with severe impairment (∆ = -7.2%, 95% CI: -8.0% to -6.3%). Pain characterized as "mild" had the highest magnitude of apparent underreporting.
In residents with moderate to severe cognitive impairment, documentation of any pain was lower than expected in the absence of cognitive impairment. This finding supports the hypothesis that an inverse association between pain and cognitive impairment may be explained by differential misclassification. This study highlights the need to develop analytic and/or procedural solutions to correct for recall/reporter bias resulting from cognitive impairment.
尽管实验证据表明,认知障碍不会影响疼痛敏感性,但对养老院居民的观察性研究发现,认知障碍与居民报告或员工评估的疼痛之间呈负相关。根据假设,这种负相关可能部分归因于由于回忆和沟通限制导致的差异分类,本研究实施了一种缺失数据方法,以量化认知障碍程度不同时对疼痛、疼痛频率和疼痛强度的分类错误的绝对程度。
我们使用 2016 年最小数据集 3.0,对新入住的美国养老院居民进行了横断面研究。疼痛的存在、严重程度和频率是通过居民报告的测量来评估的。对于无法表达自己疼痛的居民,养老院工作人员根据直接观察居民和记录审查来记录疼痛。我们通过对修改后的疼痛指标进行多重插补,估计在没有认知障碍的情况下疼痛的预期水平,对于无/轻度认知障碍的居民,保留这些指标的值,并将其设置为中度/重度认知障碍的居民的缺失值。通过计算记录的疼痛与预期疼痛水平之间的差异来计算疼痛的存在和严重程度的绝对差异(∆)。
严重认知障碍患者(∆=-10.2%,95%置信区间(CI):-10.9%至-9.4%)观察到的与预期的居民报告疼痛之间的差异大于中度认知障碍患者(∆=-4.5%,95% CI:-5.4%至-3.6%)。对于员工评估的疼痛,中度障碍患者(∆=-7.2%,95% CI:-8.3%至-6.0%)和重度障碍患者(∆=-7.2%,95% CI:-8.0%至-6.3%)之间的明显漏报程度相似。被归类为“轻度”的疼痛具有最高程度的明显漏报。
在中度至重度认知障碍患者中,在没有认知障碍的情况下,任何疼痛的记录都低于预期。这一发现支持这样一种假设,即疼痛与认知障碍之间的负相关可能是由于分类错误造成的。本研究强调需要开发分析和/或程序解决方案,以纠正因认知障碍导致的回忆/报告者偏见。