Chronic Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Accuracy of the Brief Pain Inventory in Identifying Sleep Disturbances in Chronic Pain Patients
Sleep impairments reliably predict worsened chronic pain and correlate with visual analogue pain scores. Therapies targeted at improving sleep, including cognitive behavioral therapy, improve both sleep quality and also pain management, and reduce interference of pain with daily activities. As effective pain relief decreases sleep disturbances, improvement in sleep has been proposed as marker of effective pain management. Hence it is useful to evaluate sleep disturbances in chronic pain population both in clinical and research setting. There are many tools to evaluate sleep quality; the routinely used simple brief pain inventory (BPI) has a single question about sleep. We will compare three dedicated sleep measures to the BPI in patients with chronic pain.
The prevalence of sleep disturbances including insomnia is high in chronic pain patients and
is known to contribute to the maintenance of chronic pain. A large survey estimated that
chronic pain of moderate to severe intensity occurs in 19% of adult Europeans, and that 50%
of this cohort reported feeling tired all the time. Studies using specific sleep assessment
tools have found that up to 50% of patients complain of poor sleep and 40% have clinically
defined insomnia.
Though association between sleep and pain is well established, it is still unclear about the
direction of causality. A recent narrative review has found that sleep impairments reliably
predict worsening of chronic pain and correlate with higher visual analogue pain scores.
Therapies targeted at improving sleep hygiene, including cognitive behavioral therapy, have
been shown to not only improve sleep quality, but also pain management and reduce the degree
to which pain interfered with daily activities. As effective pain relief decreases sleep
disturbances, improvement in sleep has been proposed as marker of effective pain
management.8 Hence it is useful to evaluate sleep disturbances in chronic pain population
both in clinical and research setting.
There are at least 30 different sleep evaluation scales and questionnaires. Previous works
have used several different tools to quantify the prevalence and severity of sleep
disturbance in chronic pain patients. The most commonly used tools are the Pittsburgh Sleep
Quality Index (PSQI) and the Medical Outcomes Study (MOS) Sleep Scale. The PSQI has an
extensive body of evidence in detecting primary insomnia, demonstrating a high test-retest
reliability and contains domains which are of importance when measuring sleep disturbance in
chronic pain. However, none of the aforementioned tools directly assesses the impact of pain
on sleep, and are as such not capable of establishing a direct link between sleep
disturbance and chronic pain. Chronic Pain Sleep Inventory (CPSI) and Pain and Sleep
Questionnaires (PSQ) were developed to assess the impact of pain on pain related sleep
disturbances. These multidimensional items were abbreviated to Sleep Pain Index (SPI) and
Pain and Sleep three-item index (PSQ-3) and specifically targeted at assessing sleep
disturbance in patients with chronic pain. Both SPI and PSQ- 3 have been tested for their
reliability and validity. The Verran Snyder-Halpern (VSH) scale uses visual analogue scales
to describe sleep quality, latency and disturbance but none of these questionnaires have
been widely adopted either in research setting or clinical practice. Though the reasons are
not known, people may find multi-items dedicated questionnaires as cumbersome and
overwhelming. One way to circumvent the issue is to utilize a single item questionnaire or
even use a single item on the widely used pain questionnaire. Single item numerical rating
scales to measure sleep quality have shown modest correlation with the MOS sleep scale and
may be of particular benefit when repeated measurements are used due to their simple nature.
Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) is one of the most widely used measurement tool and is advocated
as one of the core outcomes tool for pain clinical trials. BPI provides an overall picture
of pain status and its interference with general health and serves to help monitor response
to treatment with time. Included in the BPI is a single numerically rated score assessing
the degree to which pain interferes with sleep. This item has the potential to detect the
impact of pain on pain related sleep disturbances thereby insomnia and therefore lead to
treatment. Validation of this commonly used questionnaire BPI, against a formal sleep
assessment tools would not only allow identification of patients with significant sleep
disturbance and facilitate prompt targeted treatment but also help to evaluate the pain
treatment.
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