Department of Rehabilitation Sciences, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
Unit for Active Coping Strategies for Pain in Primary Care, East-Valladolid Primary Care Management, Castilla and León Public Health System (Sacyl), Valladolid, Spain.
Pain. 2023 Oct 1;164(10):2296-2305. doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000002929. Epub 2023 Jun 7.
Pain neuroscience education combined with exercise (PNE + exercise) is an effective treatment for patients with chronic spinal pain. Yet, however, little is known about its underlying therapeutic mechanisms. Thus, this study aimed to provide the first insights by performing a novel mediation analysis approach in a published randomized controlled trial in primary care where PNE + exercise was compared with standard physiotherapy. Four mediators (catastrophizing, kinesiophobia, central sensitization-related distress, and pain intensity) measured at postintervention and 3 outcomes (disability, health-related quality of life, and pain medication intake) measured at 6-month follow-up were included into the analysis. The postintervention measure of each outcome was also introduced as a competing candidate mediator in each respective model. In addition, we repeated the analysis by including all pairwise mediator-mediator interactions to allow the effect of each mediator to differ based on the other mediators' values. Postintervention improvements in disability, medication intake, and health-related quality of life strongly mediated PNE + exercise effects on each of these outcomes at 6-month follow-up, respectively. Reductions in disability and medication intake were also mediated by reductions in kinesiophobia and central sensitization-related distress. Reductions in kinesiophobia also mediated gains in the quality of life. Changes in catastrophizing and pain intensity did not mediate improvements in any outcome. The mediation analyses with mediator-mediator interactions suggested a potential effect modification rather than causal independence among the mediators. The current results, therefore, support the PNE framework to some extent as well as highlight the need for implementing the recent approaches for mediation analysis to accommodate dependencies among the mediators.
疼痛神经科学教育结合运动(PNE+运动)是治疗慢性脊柱疼痛患者的有效方法。然而,对于其潜在的治疗机制知之甚少。因此,本研究旨在通过对初级保健中发表的一项随机对照试验进行新的中介分析方法,提供第一个见解,其中将 PNE+运动与标准物理治疗进行比较。将在干预后测量的 4 个中介变量(灾难化、运动恐惧症、与中枢敏化相关的痛苦和疼痛强度)和在 6 个月随访时测量的 3 个结果(残疾、健康相关生活质量和疼痛药物摄入)纳入分析。每个结果的干预后测量值也被引入到各自的模型中作为竞争候选中介。此外,我们通过纳入所有中介-中介相互作用重复分析,允许每个中介的效果根据其他中介的价值而有所不同。干预后残疾、药物摄入和健康相关生活质量的改善分别强烈介导了 PNE+运动对这些结果在 6 个月随访时的影响。运动恐惧症和与中枢敏化相关的痛苦的减少也介导了残疾和药物摄入的减少。运动恐惧症的减少也介导了生活质量的提高。灾难化和疼痛强度的变化并没有介导任何结果的改善。具有中介-中介相互作用的中介分析表明,中介之间存在潜在的效应修饰,而不是因果独立性。因此,目前的结果在一定程度上支持 PNE 框架,并强调需要实施最近的中介分析方法,以适应中介之间的依赖性。