Abstract

PurposePain and depression have been shown to have a bidirectional interaction. Although several outcome studies have been conducted, it is still unclear if and how depression influences pain outcome. The current study aims to further clarify this relationship by comparing the predicting value of an interview- and a questionnaire-based assessment of depression.Patients and MethodsThis retrospective study analyzed data of N = 496 chronic pain patients who received a multimodal pain management program. Multilevel models were performed with depression as predictor, pain measures as dependent variables, and the respective pain score at baseline as covariate. Depression was measured at baseline with (1) a semi-structured psychiatric interview corresponding to the ICD-10 and (2) the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D). Pain outcomes were pain intensity assessed with the Numeric Rating Scale (NRS), pain disability measured with the pain disability index (PDI), and affective as well as sensory pain perception assessed with the Pain Perception Scale (PPS-A/PPS-S).ResultsAt post-treatment, pain intensity (NRS) was higher in patients with depression. This result emerged for interview- (ICD-10) and questionnaire- (CES-D) based depression. These results were significant after correction for multiple testing as well. Moreover, affective pain perception (PSS-A) at post-treatment was higher in patients with depression. Again, this result emerged for interview- (ICD-10) and questionnaire- (CES-D) based depression but it was not significant anymore after correction for multiple testing. Furthermore, pain disability (PDI) was higher at post-treatment in patients with depression according to the CES-D than in those without CES-D depression and this difference in the PDI did not emerge for interview-based depression. Yet, this difference on the PDI between the CES-D depression group and the CES-D no depression group was not significant anymore after correction for multiple testing.ConclusionThe hypothesis that how depression is assessed – interview-based corresponding to the ICD-10 or with the CES-D – contributes to the association between depression and pain treatment outcome could not be confirmed. Future research should use more than one interview and questionnaire to assess depression, since our results are limited to the clinical ICD-10 interview and the CES-D.

Highlights

  • A meta-analysis of epidemiological studies investigating chronic pain revealed prevalence estimates from 8.7 to 64.4 percent depending on how chronic pain was defined (Steingrímsdóttir et al, 2017)

  • The aim of this study is to investigate, if there is a difference between clinical interview-based ICD-10-corresponding depression and questionnaire-based depression according to the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) in predicting pain outcomes

  • Independent from the assessment method of depression (ICD10 interview-based vs. CES-D questionnaire-based), depressed patients had higher pain chronicity (MPSS), higher pain disability (PDI), as well as higher affective (PPS-A), and sensory (PPS-S) pain at pre-treatment

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Summary

Introduction

A meta-analysis of epidemiological studies investigating chronic pain revealed prevalence estimates from 8.7 to 64.4 percent depending on how chronic pain was defined (Steingrímsdóttir et al, 2017). One of the five leading factors causing YLD (34.1 million) (Vos et al, 2017), is common among patients with chronic pain (Bener et al, 2013; Stubbs et al, 2017). A large study evaluating the world mental health surveys of multiple western as well as developing countries showed a pooled odds ratio for depression among pain patients of 2.3 (CI: 2.1, 2.5) (Demyttenaere et al, 2007). A recent study revealed significant associations between severe pain and depression in 44 of 47 investigated lowand middle-income countries (Stubbs et al, 2017)

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