Greenlee Tina A, George Steven Z, Pickens Bryan, Rhon Daniel I
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Brooke Army Medical Center, JBSA Fort Sam Houston, TX, USA.
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Uniformed Services University, Bethesda, MD, USA.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2025 Apr 1;483(4):607-620. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000003351. Epub 2025 Jan 21.
A number of efforts have been made to tailor behavioral healthcare treatments to the variable needs of patients with low back pain (LBP). The most common approach involves the STarT Back Screening Tool (SBST) to triage the need for psychologically informed care, which explores concerns about pain and addresses unhelpful beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors. Such beliefs that pain always signifies injury or tissue damage and that exercise should be avoided have been implied as psychosocial mediators of chronic pain and can impede recovery. The ability of physical therapy interventions guided by baseline stratification for risk of persistent LBP or related functional limitations to improve unhelpful pain beliefs has not been well assessed. Because treatments are aimed at addressing these beliefs, understanding a bit more about the nature of beliefs about pain (for example, attitudes and knowledge) might help us understand how to better tailor this care or even our risk-stratification approaches for future treatment of patients with LBP.
QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: (1) Did patients assigned to receive risk-stratified care score higher on an assessment of pain science knowledge? (2) Did patients assigned to receive risk-stratified care have fewer unhelpful attitudes related to pain? (3) Did patients assigned to receive risk-stratified care have less pain-associated psychological distress? (4) Regardless of intervention received, is baseline SBST risk category (low, medium, or high) associated with changes in attitudes and knowledge about pain?
This is a secondary analysis of short-term changes in pain beliefs following the 6-week treatment phase of a randomized controlled trial that examined the effectiveness of a risk-stratified physical therapy intervention on pain-related disability at 1 year. Between April 2017 and February 2020, a total of 290 patients in the Military Health System seeking primary care for LBP were enrolled in a trial comparing a behavioral-based intervention to usual care. The intervention involved psychologically informed physical therapy using cognitive behavioral principles and included tailored education, graded exercise, and graded exposure. Individuals assigned to usual care followed treatment plans set forth by their primary care provider. Thirty-one patients were removed from Optimal Screening for Prediction of Referral and Outcome Yellow Flag (OSPRO-YF) tool analyses due to missing assessments at 6 weeks (n = 15 intervention; n = 16 usual care). This resulted in 89% (259 of 290) of participants included for secondary analysis, with no difference in baseline demographic characteristics between groups. The usual-care group comprised 50% of the total study group (129 of 259), with a mean age of 34 ± 9 years; 67% (87 of 129) were men. The risk-stratified care group comprised 50% (130 of 259) of the total study group, with a mean ± SD age of 35 ± 8 years; 64% (83 of 130) were men. Six additional individuals were removed from Survey of Pain Attitudes harm scale (SOPA-h) and revised Neurophysiology of Pain Questionnaire (rNPQ) analyses for missing baseline data (n = 1 intervention) and 6-week data (n = 2 intervention; n = 3 usual care). The rNPQ captured current pain science knowledge, the SOPA-h examined patient attitudes about pain (the extent of beliefs that pain leads to damage and that movement is harmful), and the OSPRO-YF assessed patients for yellow flag clinical markers of pain-related psychological distress across 11 constructs within domains of negative mood, fear avoidance, and positive affect/coping indicative of elevated vulnerability and decreased resilience. Outcomes were assessed at baseline and 6 weeks, and data were analyzed per protocol. We assessed between-group differences at 6 weeks using linear mixed-effects models of pain attitudes and knowledge and related distress, controlling for age, gender, and baseline pain. Regardless of treatment group, we also analyzed differences in rNPQ and SOPA-h scores at 6 weeks based on SBST risk category (low versus medium or high) using generalized linear (Gaussian) regression models.
Risk-stratified treatment was associated with improvements in pain knowledge (rNPQ mean difference 6% [95% confidence interval (CI) 1% to 11%]; p = 0.01) and a reduction in indicators of pain-associated psychological distress (OSPRO-YF mean difference -1 [95% CI -2 to 0]; p = 0.01) at 6 weeks compared with usual care. There was no difference between groups for SOPA-h score at 6 weeks (mean difference -0.2 [95% CI -0.3 to 0.0]; p = 0.09). Patients with medium- or high-risk scores on the SBST, regardless of intervention, improved slightly more on SOPA-h (β = -0.31; p < 0.01) but not rNPQ (β = 0.02; p = 0.95) than those scoring low risk.
Patients receiving risk-stratified care showed small improvements in pain knowledge and reductions in pain-related psychological distress at 6 weeks, immediately after intervention, compared with usual care. Implementation of this risk-stratified care approach for LBP was able to change patients' perceptions about pain and reduce some of their psychological distress beyond what was achieved by usual care in this setting. As these factors are believed to favorably mediate treatment outcomes, future studies should investigate whether these improvements persist over the long term, determine how they influence clinical outcomes, and explore alternatives for risk stratification and treatment to elicit greater improvements.Level of Evidence Level III, therapeutic study.
为了根据腰痛(LBP)患者的不同需求调整行为保健治疗方法,已经做出了许多努力。最常见的方法是使用STarT Back筛查工具(SBST)对心理知情护理的需求进行分类,该工具探讨对疼痛的担忧,并解决无益的信念、态度和行为。诸如疼痛总是意味着受伤或组织损伤以及应避免运动等信念,已被认为是慢性疼痛的心理社会调节因素,并且可能阻碍康复。基于持续性LBP风险或相关功能限制的基线分层指导的物理治疗干预改善无益疼痛信念的能力尚未得到充分评估。由于治疗旨在解决这些信念,更多地了解疼痛信念的本质(例如态度和知识)可能有助于我们理解如何更好地调整这种护理,甚至是我们未来对LBP患者进行治疗的风险分层方法。
问题/目的:(1)被分配接受风险分层护理的患者在疼痛科学知识评估中得分更高吗?(2)被分配接受风险分层护理的患者与疼痛相关的无益态度更少吗?(3)被分配接受风险分层护理的患者疼痛相关的心理困扰更少吗?(4)无论接受何种干预,基线SBST风险类别(低、中或高)与疼痛态度和知识的变化相关吗?
这是一项对一项随机对照试验6周治疗阶段后疼痛信念短期变化的二次分析,该试验研究了风险分层物理治疗干预对1年时疼痛相关残疾的有效性。在2017年4月至2020年2月期间,军事卫生系统中共有290名因LBP寻求初级保健的患者参加了一项试验,比较基于行为的干预与常规护理。干预包括使用认知行为原则的心理知情物理治疗,包括量身定制的教育、分级运动和分级暴露。分配到常规护理的个体遵循其初级保健提供者制定的治疗计划。由于在6周时缺少评估(n = 15干预组;n = 16常规护理组),31名患者被排除在转诊和结果黄旗预测最佳筛查(OSPRO - YF)工具分析之外。这导致89%(290名中的259名)参与者被纳入二次分析,两组之间的基线人口统计学特征没有差异。常规护理组占总研究组的50%(259名中的129名),平均年龄为34±9岁;67%(129名中的87名)为男性。风险分层护理组占总研究组的50%(259名中的130名),平均年龄±标准差为35±8岁;64%(130名中的83名)为男性。另外6名个体因缺少基线数据(n = 1干预组)和6周数据(n = 2干预组;n = 3常规护理组)被排除在疼痛态度伤害量表(SOPA - h)和修订的疼痛神经生理学问卷(rNPQ)分析之外。rNPQ获取当前的疼痛科学知识,SOPA - h检查患者对疼痛的态度(疼痛导致损伤和运动有害的信念程度),OSPRO - YF在负面情绪、恐惧回避和积极情绪/应对等领域的11个结构中评估患者疼痛相关心理困扰的黄旗临床标志物,这些结构表明易感性增加和恢复力下降。在基线和6周时评估结果,并按照方案分析数据。我们使用疼痛态度和知识以及相关困扰的线性混合效应模型,在控制年龄、性别和基线疼痛的情况下,评估6周时的组间差异。无论治疗组如何,我们还使用广义线性(高斯)回归模型,基于SBST风险类别(低与中或高)分析6周时rNPQ和SOPA - h分数的差异。
与常规护理相比,风险分层治疗在6周时与疼痛知识的改善相关(rNPQ平均差异6%[95%置信区间(CI)1%至11%];p = 0.01)以及疼痛相关心理困扰指标的降低(OSPRO - YF平均差异 - 1[95%CI - 2至0];p = 0.01)。6周时两组之间的SOPA - h分数没有差异(平均差异 - 0.2[95%CI - 0.3至0.0];p = 0.0 ninth)。SBST风险评分为中或高的患者,无论接受何种干预,在SOPA - h上的改善(β = - 0.31;p < 0.01)略大于低风险评分患者,但在rNPQ上没有差异(β = 0.02;p = 0.95)。
与常规护理相比,接受风险分层护理的患者在干预后立即在6周时疼痛知识有小幅改善,疼痛相关心理困扰有所降低。在这种情况下,对LBP实施这种风险分层护理方法能够改变患者对疼痛的认知,并减少他们的一些心理困扰,超出了常规护理所达到的程度。由于这些因素被认为对治疗结果有积极的调节作用,未来的研究应该调查这些改善是否长期持续,确定它们如何影响临床结果,并探索风险分层和治疗的替代方法以获得更大的改善。证据水平:III级,治疗性研究。