Dong Huan-Ji, Dragioti Elena, Rivano Fischer Marcelo, Gerdle Björn
Pain and Rehabilitation Centre, Department of Health, Medicine and Caring Sciences, Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden.
Department of Health Sciences, Research Group Rehabilitation Medicine, Lund University, Lund, Sweden.
J Pain Res. 2021 Jun 21;14:1863-1873. doi: 10.2147/JPR.S305399. eCollection 2021.
It is known that chronic pain makes it difficult to lose weight, but it is unknown whether obese patients (body mass index ≥30 kg/m) who experience significant pain relief after interdisciplinary multimodal pain rehabilitation (IMMPR) lose weight.
This study investigated whether obese patients with chronic pain lost weight after completing IMMPR in specialist pain units. The association of pain relief and weight change over time was also examined.
Data from obese patients included in the Swedish Quality Registry for Pain Rehabilitation for specialized pain units were used (N=224), including baseline and 12-month follow-up after IMMPR from 2016 to 2018. Patients reported body weight and height, pain aspects (eg, pain intensity), physical activity behaviours, psychological distress, and health-related quality of life (HRQoL). A reduction of at least 5% of initial weight indicates clinically significant weight loss. Patients were classified into three groups based on the pain relief levels after IMMPR: pain relief of clinical significance (30% or more reduction of pain intensity); pain relief without clinical significance (less than 30% reduction of pain intensity); and no pain relief. Linear mixed regression models were used to examine the weight changes among the groups with different pain relief levels.
A significant reduction of pain intensity was found after IMMPR ( < 0.01, effect size Cohen's d = 0.34). A similar proportion of patients in the three groups with different pain relief levels had clinically significant weight loss (20.2%~24.3%, = 0.47). Significant improvements were reported regarding physical activity behaviour, psychological distress, and HRQoL, but weight change was not associated with changes of pain intensity.
About one-fifth of obese patients achieved significant weight reduction after IMMPR. Obese patients need a tailored pain rehabilitation program incorporating a targeted approach for weight management.
已知慢性疼痛会使人难以减肥,但目前尚不清楚在接受多学科综合疼痛康复治疗(IMMPR)后疼痛得到显著缓解的肥胖患者(体重指数≥30kg/m²)是否会减肥。
本研究调查了在专科疼痛科完成IMMPR后,慢性疼痛肥胖患者是否减肥。还研究了疼痛缓解与体重随时间变化之间的关联。
使用瑞典专科疼痛科疼痛康复质量登记处纳入的肥胖患者数据(N = 224),包括2016年至2018年IMMPR后的基线数据和12个月随访数据。患者报告了体重、身高、疼痛方面(如疼痛强度)、身体活动行为、心理困扰以及健康相关生活质量(HRQoL)。初始体重至少减轻5%表明具有临床意义的体重减轻。根据IMMPR后的疼痛缓解水平,将患者分为三组:具有临床意义的疼痛缓解(疼痛强度降低30%或更多);无临床意义的疼痛缓解(疼痛强度降低少于30%);以及未缓解疼痛。使用线性混合回归模型检查不同疼痛缓解水平组之间的体重变化。
IMMPR后疼痛强度显著降低(P < 0.01,效应量Cohen's d = 0.34)。不同疼痛缓解水平的三组患者中,具有临床意义的体重减轻的比例相似(20.2%~24.3%,P = 0.47)。在身体活动行为、心理困扰和HRQoL方面报告有显著改善,但体重变化与疼痛强度变化无关。
约五分之一的肥胖患者在IMMPR后实现了显著体重减轻。肥胖患者需要一个量身定制的疼痛康复计划,其中纳入针对体重管理的目标方法。