Chronic Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Nationwide Evaluation of Multimodal Rehabilitation in Patients With Chronic Musculoskeletal Pain: Treatment Effectiveness and Prediction
Chronic pain is a common health problem that causes enormous social costs. A common method for treating patients with chronic pain problems are multimodal rehabilitation (MMR), which consists of a combination of physical exercise, cognitive behavioural therapy and work training coordinated in an interdisciplinary team. Our research aims to evaluate the effectiveness of MMR on health, quality of life, physical activity, return to work and health economics, with the long-term goal of developing MMR. We aim also to evaluate predictive factors for good and bad treatment outcomes in order to better adapt the MMR to the patient. The project is based on patient-reported data from the Swedish Quality Registry for Pain Rehabilitation, which routinely collects data from 40 (2017) Swedish specialist MMR clinics from all parts of the country. We expect increased knowledge of treatment effects and how MMR can be effectively adapted according to the patient's limitations and resources. Our project group is interdisciplinary and is active in nationwide research networks that focus on chronic pain and rehabilitation.
Chronic musculoskeletal pain is a public health problem, which frequently cause long-term
sickness absence (>180 days). Societal costs of chronic pain are immense, with direct and
indirect costs amounting to 90 billion Swedish crowns per year according to Swedish Council
on Technology Assessment (SBU). Despite this, few policies have aimed specifically at chronic
pain as a public health problem, also acknowledged in the later literature. Multimodal
rehabilitation (MMR) is an increasingly used method in this patient group and denotes a
combination of psychological measures, physical activity/exercise and manual or physical
methods, administered by multidisciplinary teams. Its approach considers the patient's needs
from a bio-psycho-social perspective, including work or employment status. At date, MMR is
commonly offered by a number of specialist clinics throughout Sweden, of which more than 95%
(currently 40) are connected to the Swedish Quality Registry for Pain Rehabilitation (SQRP)
with the purpose to collect data for work with quality improvement and research.
According to the latest report from SBU, medium to high evidence from available research
supports that MMR is effective for patients with chronic pain, with a few studies suggesting
that MMR is superior to traditional and single-treatment programs. However, there is a
paucity in the scientific literature with respect to how MMR should be designed to optimize
results, and comparisons between different MMR designs or durations are limited. This void is
a cause for uncertainty which delays improvement of existing MMR programs treating patients
with chronic pain. Further, it is necessary to investigate whether reported results from RCTs
and systematic reviews truly apply to naturalistic practice settings with a consecutive
non-selective flow of patients, which may be done using a research methodology known as
practice-based evidence through prospective observational cohort study designs. Our intention
with the present research program is therefore to clarify effectiveness of different MMR
designs. Furthermore, knowledge on risk predictors of poor treatment outcomes, and how
long-term pain can be prevented and treated is greatly limited. Here, it is currently unclear
what factor, patient related and/or treatment component, are more or less effective in
different subgroups of patients with chronic pain. This has been discussed in the national
SQRP-network and is in demand in the scientific literature. Knowledge of this will enable MMR
providers to customize treatment according to patient profile in order to maximize treatment
outcomes in relation to costs.
The overall aim of this research program is to prospectively evaluate multimodal
rehabilitation (MMR) in patients with chronic pain conditions. The long-term goal is to
develop and implement updated knowledge into Swedish MMR programs. The following two
strategic aims will be targeted: 1) effectiveness of MMR programs with different durations
(short, moderate and long-duration) , 2) prediction and risk of positive and negative
outcomes, respectively.
Methods Study design This research project is carried out with longitudinal cohort-study
designs based on data extracted from the Swedish Quality Registry for Pain Rehabilitation
(SQRP; www.ucr.uu.se/nrs). Data covering several years will be used to analyse the effects of
MMR. We expect a large sample size, it entail high test-power for the analyses of overall
effects. Therefore, in addition to tests of statistical significance, effect sizes will be
calculated in order to avoid type I error, i.e. avoid to falsely claiming that effect exists
with support the support of p-values in such large sample. Included subjects are patients
aged between 16 and 67 with a referral to a MMR clinic (specialist clinic) for chronic
musculoskeletal pain problems.
Data from SQRP allows for longitudinal evaluation of treatment effects, prediction analyses.
SQRP is a registry mainly covering patient-reported questionnaire data intended for health
care research and quality work for healthcare providers that offer MMR. SQRP is connected to
the Swedish Association of Local Authorities and Regions (Sveriges Kommuner och Landsting)
and part of a system of national quality registries in Sweden (www.kvalitetsregister.se).
Currently, 40 Swedish MMR specialist-treatment units (representing over 95% of the pain
rehabilitation centres in the country) are associated with the registry and continuously
transmit their patient data to SQRP (www.ucr.uu.se/nrs/index.php/om-registret). This means
that nationwide data from all parts of Sweden is included in SQRP which constitutes a major
strength of this database. Based on this data, an annual report is compiled by the SQRP
steering group and co-workers describing and comparing the performance of the associated MMR
treatment units on the overall scale. Since 2007 these accounts have been available to the
public (http://www.ucr.uu.se/nrs/index.php).
Data from established questionnaires are registered in SQRP to measure health-related quality
of life (SF-36), the consequences of prolonged pain problems on the level of activity and
function (Multidimensional Pain Inventory, MPI), perceived health (EQ-5D), pain intensity
(numeric rating scale), and anxiety and depression (The Hospital Anxiety and Depression
Scale, HAD). Furthermore, data on socio-demographic details, information on employment and
sick leave status as well as pain duration and future prospects is collected. In addition to
the patient-reported data, an attending MMR practitioner complements the registry with the
patient's diagnosis, information on type of pain and expected form of employment
(post-rehabilitation).
Data analysis Health-related quality of life, pain intensity, function, activity level, as
well as anxiety will serve as dependent outcome measures in the evaluation of effects. The
use of a single outcome measure is rarely sufficient to describe the patient's experience,
symptoms or treatment outcome in terms of understanding potential effects. However, multiple
outcome variables can be inter-correlated and therefore it is reasonable to apply
multivariate analyses to control for such dependent relationships. Therefore, multivariate
repeated measures analyses will be used to approach effect variables prospectively, while
logistic regressions (or similar) with a multiple approach will be applied to analyse
prediction models.
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