Abstract

Osteoarthritis (OA) pain is among the leading causes of disability worldwide in older people. Since its prevalence is growing in aging, a significant burden for society is expected. This work ascertained whether level of disability in self-reported functioning differs by pain severity and usual analgesic treatment among older OA patients in Spain. The Spanish-National-Health-Survey, a large, nationally representative, cross-sectional general health survey including 23,089 persons, was analyzed. Patients aged 65 + years with a self-reported physician OA diagnosis were classified according to severity of pain (no/mild, moderate or severe pain) and treated or untreated with analgesia. Assessment of function included basic and instrumental activities-of-daily-living (BADL, IADL), mental, social, and cognitive functions, scored on a 0% (no limitation) to 100% (complete limitation) standardized metric. Caregiver need for BADL and IADL was also recorded. A total of 3526 patients were analyzed (women 73.3%; age 77.4 [SD: 7.5]). Adjusted functioning scores showed significant association with pain severity, and for BADL, IADL and social function. Patients with severe pain and treated with analgesia had higher limitation scores, ranging on average between 31.5% on BADL, 34.1% on IADL, 45.0% on mental, 42.2% on social, and 23.4% in cognitive domain. The proportions of patients needing a caregiver for BADL (43.4%) and IADL (56.2%) were also the highest in patients with severe pain and treated with analgesia. Regardless of usual utilization of analgesics, the severity of pain seemed to be the major determinant of functional impairment, and caregiving need, in all domains of functioning in older OA patients in Spain. Existing treatment strategies are analgesics based and do not meet patient needs for adequate pain management.

Highlights

  • Osteoarthritis (OA) pain is among the leading causes of disability and social isolation worldwide

  • Adjusted means (95% confidence interval [CI]) scores in domains of functioning showed significant association with pain severity (p < 0.001) but not treatment status, except basic and instrumental activities and social functioning, with higher scores in treated patients

  • Pain severity was a major driver of functional impairment in all the main domains of functioning analyzed in older OA patients

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Summary

Objectives

The objective of this study was to determine the level of disability in key domains of the patient functioning in adults 65 years or older with OA pain in Spain, based on the data collected in the 2017 Spanish National Health Survey (ENSE) [22]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion

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