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Moderate to Severe Osteoarthritis Pain and Its Impact on Patients in the United States: A National Survey

Patricia Schepman, Sheena Thakkar, R.L. Robinson, Deepa Malhotra, Birol Emir, Craig Beck

2021Journal of Pain Research43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Purpose: Osteoarthritis (OA) is one of the most common causes of chronic pain and a leading cause of disability in the US. The objective of this study was to examine the clinical and economic burden of OA by pain severity. Patients and Methods: We used nationally representative survey data. Adults ≥ 18 years with self-reported physician-diagnosed OA and experiencing OA pain were included in the study. OA pain severity was measured using the Short Form McGill Pain Questionnaire Visual Analog Scale (SF-MPQ-VAS). Data were collected for demographics, clinical characteristics, health-related quality of life (HRQoL), productivity, OA treatment, adherence to pain medication, and healthcare resource utilization. Univariate analysis was performed to examine differences between respondents with moderate-to-severe OA pain vs those with mild OA pain. Results: Higher proportions of respondents with moderate-to-severe OA pain (n=3798) compared with mild OA pain (n=2038) were female (69.4% vs 57.3%), < 65 years of age (54.8% vs 43.4%), and not employed (70.6% vs 64.5%). Respondents with moderate-to-severe OA pain experienced OA pain daily (80.8% vs 48.8%), were obese (53.0% vs 40.5%), had more comorbidities (sleep disturbance, insomnia, depression, and anxiety), and reported significantly poorer health status and HRQoL, and greater productivity and activity impairment (all P < 0.05). Moderate-to-severe OA pain respondents were prescribed significantly more pain medications than mild OA pain respondents (41.0% vs 17.0%) and had higher adherence (75.9% vs 64.1%) yet were less satisfied with their pain medications (all P < 0.001). Outpatient and emergency room visits, and hospitalizations in the 6 months prior to the survey were significantly higher in moderate-to-severe OA pain respondents vs those with mild OA pain (all P < 0.05). Conclusion: Patient and clinical burden was significantly greater in moderate-to-severe OA pain respondents vs mild OA pain respondents and may inform decision-making for appropriate resource allocation and effective management strategies that target specific subgroups. Keywords: osteoarthritis, moderate-to-severe pain, pain severity, health-related quality of life, HRQoL, healthcare resource utilization, HCRU, medication adherence, treatment satisfaction

Topics & Concepts

MedicineOsteoarthritisQuality of life (healthcare)Physical therapyVisual analogue scaleDepression (economics)Brief Pain InventoryAnxietyMcGill Pain QuestionnaireChronic painInternal medicineAlternative medicinePsychiatryPathologyEconomicsNursingMacroeconomicsOsteoarthritis Treatment and MechanismsMusculoskeletal pain and rehabilitationPain Mechanisms and Treatments
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