Abstract

BackgroundThe Pain Disability Index (PDI) is a widely-used instrument to measure pain-related disability. The aim of this study was to assess the responsiveness and interpretation of change score of the PDI in patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain (CMP) at discharge of vocational rehabilitation.MethodsRetrospective data of patients with CMP who attended vocational rehabilitation between 2014 and 2017 was used. The anchor-based method was used to assess the responsiveness of the total sample and of PDI baseline quartile groups. A receiver operating characteristic curve was performed, including Area Under the Curve (AUC) and Minimal Important Change (MIC).ResultsThe PDI showed responsive to detect clinically relevant changes in pain-related disability at discharge of vocational rehabilitation (AUC 0.79). A PDI change score of 13 points (MIC 12.5) can be considered as a real change in pain-related disability for the total study sample, and a PDI change score of 7–20 points can be considered as a real change in pain-related disability for PDI lowest and highest baseline quartile scores.ConclusionThe PDI is responsive in patients with CMP at discharge of vocational rehabilitation. The interpretation of change score depends on PDI baseline score. Patients with a PDI baseline score of ≤27 should decrease minimal 7 points, patients with a baseline score between 28 and 42 should decrease minimal 15 points, and patients with a baseline score ≥ 43 should decrease minimal 20 points.

Highlights

  • The Pain Disability Index (PDI) is a widely-used instrument to measure pain-related disability

  • The results show that the PDI is responsive to detect clinically relevant changes in pain-related disability at discharge of vocational rehabilitation (AUC 0.79)

  • A PDI change score of 13 points (MIC 12.5) can be considered as a real change in pain-related disability for the total study sample, and a PDI change score of 7–20 points can be considered as a real change in pain-related disability for PDI lowest and highest baseline quartile scores

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Summary

Introduction

The Pain Disability Index (PDI) is a widely-used instrument to measure pain-related disability. The aim of this study was to assess the responsiveness and interpretation of change score of the PDI in patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain (CMP) at discharge of vocational rehabilitation. A decrease of pain-related disability is a desired outcome measure after rehabilitation for people with CMP [2]. A widely used and studied instrument to measure pain-related disability is the Pain Disability Index (PDI) [2, 3]. An outcome instrument should be able to distinguish clinically important change from measurement error [10]. The relation between responsiveness and measurement error should be made to interpret the (change) score of a questionnaire [10]. To our knowledge, only one study [8] has assessed responsiveness and one other study [6] has assessed measurement error of the PDI

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