Patients undergoing major limb amputation with TMR were included with minimum one year follow-up and completed questionnaires. Primary clinical outcomes included incidence of symptomatic neuromas, PLP, residual limb pain, narcotic use, and neuromodulator use. A follow-up phone survey was conducted assessing five pediatric Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) metrics adapted to assess residual limb and PLP. Nine patients (seven male and two female patients, avg. age = 16.83 ± 7.16 years) were eligible. Average time between surgery and phone follow-up was 21.3 ± 9.8 months. Average PROMIS Pediatric t-scores for measures of pain behavior, interference, quality-affective, and quality-sensory for both PLP and residual limb pain were nearly 1 standard deviation lower than the United States general pediatric population. One patient developed a symptomatic neuroma 1 year after surgery. Compared with an adult patient sample reported by Valerio et al, our TMR patients at Nationwide Children's Hospital (NCH) showed similar PLP PROMIS t-scores in pain behavior (50.1 versus 43.9) and pain interference (40.7 versus 45.6). Both pediatric and adult populations had similar residual limb pain including PROMIS pain behavior (36.7 adult versus 38.6 pediatric) and pain interference (40.7 adult versus 42.7 pediatric). TMR at the time of amputation is feasible, safe, and should be considered in the pediatric population.
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