Postoperative Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Evaluation of Smartphone Versions of the Visual Analogue Scale and Numeric Rating Scale as Postoperative Pain Assessment Tools
A large number of patients experience significant pain after surgery, and more patients report pain after discharge from hospital than before. This issue has been observed in patients who receive peripheral nerve blocks, the effects of which often wear off after discharge. There are numerous barriers to the effective control of pain away from the direct supervision of medical professionals, and personalized management strategies are necessary in order to overcome these barriers. The first step of adequate pain management is accurate pain assessment. Therefore, this study aims to validate a smartphone-based pain assessment tool that patients can access at home.
1. Purpose:
The purpose of this study is to establish whether the Panda versions of the 100mm VAS
(Visual Analogue Scale) and NRS-11 (Numeric Rating Scale) agree adequately with and can
therefore be used in lieu of already validated paper versions of these scales for the
evaluation of post-operative pain in adults. The Panda versions of the pain assessment
scales have been condensed in size onto an iPod Touch screen but otherwise appear the
same as traditional paper versions.
2. Hypothesis:
There are no significant differences in the failure rates in obtaining pain scores and
the pain scores obtained using Panda versions of the 100mm VAS and NRS-11 compared to
the traditional paper versions.
3. Justification:
The management of acute post-operative pain has a profound impact on a patient's short-
and long-term wellbeing. Studies have shown that up to 70-80% of patients experience
pain after surgery, with the majority reporting moderate, severe or extreme pain at some
point. Ineffective pain management can increase the risk of venous thromboembolism,
ischemic heart disease, pneumonia, poor wound healing , insomnia, anxiety and chronic
post surgical pain (CPSP). The management of postoperative pain after patients leave
hospital is especially inadequate, with more patients reporting pain after discharge
than before. Although peripheral nerve blocks (PNB) have demonstrated benefit in
reducing immediate/in-hospital postoperative pain compared to general anesthesia (GA),
this benefit is not sustained after patients are discharged. In fact, more patients who
received PNB report their pain as "severe", "excruciating" or "extreme" and seek medical
attention after leaving hospital, than those who were under GA. The nociceptive barrage
after the signal blockade by regional anesthesia wears off can theoretically lead to
hyperalgesia, and the substantial increase in acute pain over a period of hours can be
highly traumatic for patients. In order to minimize this effect, patients are often
advised to begin the titration of their oral analgesics prior to the resolution of their
nerve blocks, often when they do not feel much pain yet. Potential barriers encountered
during this process can include the lack of incentive to begin analgesics in the
presence of residual nociceptive blockade, the difficulty of titrating medications away
from the direct supervision of medical professionals, and the fear of medication
overdose. Therefore, detailed, easily comprehensible and patient specific pain
management instructions need to be provided as a part of the discharge plan in order to
facilitate patient compliance.
The first step involves developing a practical tool that allows for the accurate and
reliable assessment and recording of pain severity that patients can use from home. Pain
is defined as "an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or
potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage". It is a highly
individual experience. Therefore, self-report is considered the gold standard for pain
assessment, with the Verbal Rating Scale (VRS), Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) and Numeric
Rating Scale (NRS) being the three most validated self-report scales in adults. The
VAS-100mm is a 100mm line with the anchoring words "no pain" and "worst imaginable pain"
at the bottom and top, respectively. The NRS-11 is a line marked with numbers from 0 to
10 at even intervals, with the anchoring words "no pain" and "worst pain imaginable" at
0 and 10, respectively. Digital versions of pain scales that can be downloaded onto a
smartphone have been found to be comparable to traditional paper versions in terms of
their ability to measure pain. In addition to being portable and accessible, the
digitization of pain assessments have the potential to reduce human errors that could
occur during scoring and data recording. Furthermore, there is growing evidence that
smartphone applications (apps) have the potential to improve compliance with disease and
medication management by motivating patients to be involved in their own care. These
properties make them promising tools for the management of postsurgical pain at home.
The smartphone application "Panda" (Pain Assessment using a Novel Digital Application)
developed by the British Columbia Children's Hospital (BCCH) Pediatric Anesthesia
Research Team (PART), includes digital versions of the Faces Pain Scale - Revised
(FPS-R) and Color Analog Scale (CAS), and has been validated in the pediatric
population. Because the 100mm VAS and the 11-point NRS have been studied specifically in
adults as tools for the evaluation of postoperative pain, the app will be modified to
include these two scales to better suit this population.
4. Objectives:
Panda will be compared against the traditional versions for both the NRS-11 and 100mm
VAS to analyse the following endpoints:
- Agreement between the two measures — the Panda score and the "traditional" score.
- Practicality: difference in failure rates in obtaining pain scores from Panda
compared with the "traditional" methods
5. Research design:
This is an observational, randomized, cross-over controlled, open trial.
6. Statistical analysis:
- Practicality: Chi-squared tests will be used to assess the difference in failure
rates in obtaining pain scores from Panda compared with the "traditional" methods
- Agreement: an interval approach described by Bland & Altman will be used to
calculate the agreement between the the Panda scores and the 'traditional' scores.
Sample size: There will be 2 study groups- the 100mm VAS and NRS-11 groups. Each group will
contain 2 subgroups - ages >18 to < 60 years and ≥60 to ≤ 75 years. The required sample of 32
patients per subgroup has been calculated on the basis of Liao's proposed sample size
calculation for an agreement study based on the Bland-Altman interval method, setting the
discordance rate (α) = 0.05 and the tolerance probability (β) = 80%. 160 patients will be
recruited to allow for any unplanned gaps in data collection, patients withdrawing from the
study and other exclusions
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