Abstract

BackgroundChronic low back pain is a multidimensional syndrome affecting physical activity and function, health-related quality of life and employment status. The aim of the study was to quantify the cross-sectional and longitudinal validity of single measurement scales in specific construct domains and to examine how they combine to build a comprehensive outcome, covering the complex construct of chronic low back pain before and after a standardized interdisciplinary pain program.MethodsThis prospective cohort study assessed 177 patients using the Short Form 36 (SF-36), the Multidimensional Pain Inventory (MPI), the Symptom Checklist-90-Revised (SCL-90-R), the Oswestry Disability Index (ODI), and 2 functional performance tests, the Back Performance Scale (BPS) and the 6-Minute Walking Distance (6MWD). The comprehensiveness and overlap of the constructs used were quantified cross-sectionally and longitudinally by bivariate correlations, exploratory factor analysis, and effect sizes.ResultsThe mean age of the participants was 48.0 years (+/− 12.7); 59.3% were female. Correlations of baseline scores ranged from r = − 0.01 (BPS with MPI Life control) to r = 0.76 (SF-36 Mental health with MPI Negative mood). SF-36 Physical functioning correlated highest with the functional performance tests (r = 0.58 BPS, 0.67 6MWD) and ODI (0.56). Correlations of change scores (difference of follow-up – baseline score) were consistent but weaker. Factor analysis revealed 2 factors: “psychosocial” and “pain & function” (totally explained variance 44.0–60.9%). Psychosocial factors loaded strongest (up to 0.89 SCL-90-R) on the first factor, covering 2/3 of the explained variance. Pain and function (ing) loaded more strongly on the second factor (up to 0.81 SF-36 Physical functioning at follow-up). All scales showed improvements, with effect sizes ranging from 0.16–0.67.ConclusionsOur results confirm previous findings that the chronic low back pain syndrome is highly multifactorial and comprises many more dimensions of health and quality of life than merely back-related functioning. A comprehensive outcome measurement should include the predominant psychosocial domain and a broad spectrum of measurement constructs in order to assess the full complexity of the chronic low back syndrome. Convergence and divergence of the scales capture the overlapping contents and nuances within the constructs.

Highlights

  • Chronic low back pain is a multidimensional syndrome affecting physical activity and function, health-related quality of life and employment status

  • This study investigated the comprehensive scope of a multidimensional, biopsychosocial approach to the assessment of patients with chronic low back pain (CLBP), which applied a range of 4 Patient Reported Outcome Measurement (PROM) and 2 Performance-Based Measure (PBM) and determined the crosssectional and longitudinal validity of those measures

  • The selected set of individually validated measurement scales appeared to provide comprehensive coverage and assessment of the complex, multidimensional CLBP syndrome. This is supported by the high levels of explained variance in the factor analyses and by the observation that all scales in the current assessment set revealed improvement after the multimodal pain program

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Chronic low back pain is a multidimensional syndrome affecting physical activity and function, health-related quality of life and employment status. The prognosis of unspecific low back pain is good, for some patients the pain becomes persistent, reducing their health-related quality of life (HRQoL), including their physical, mental, emotional and social functioning [2, 3]. The consensus statement of the VAPAIN (Validation and Application of a patient-relevant core set of outcome domains to assess multimodal PAIN therapy) expert panel, which addressed the interdisciplinary multimodal pain treatment of chronic pain, recommended that the measurement of psychosocial factors should not be confined to anxiety and depression but include further distressing emotions, and social participation [7]. A systematic review of the psychometric measurement properties of instruments used to measure HRQoL in CLBP found that evidence regarding PROMs and the instruments’ validity was largely missing [10]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call