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<p>Psychosocial Correlates of Objective, Performance-Based, and Patient-Reported Physical Function Among Patients with Heterogeneous Chronic Pain</p>

Jonathan Greenberg, Ryan A. Mace, Paula Popok, Ronald J. Kulich, Kushang V. Patel, John W. Burns, Tamara J. Somers, Francis J. Keefe, Michael E Schatman, Ana-Maria Vrancenanu

2020Journal of Pain Research30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Improving all aspects of physical function is an important goal of chronic pain management. Few studies follow recent guidelines to comprehensively assess physical function via patient-reported, performance-based, and objective/ambulatory measures. PURPOSE: To test 1) the interrelation between the 3 types of physical function measurement and 2) the association between psychosocial factors and each type of physical function measurement. METHODS: Patients with chronic pain (N=79) completed measures of: 1) physical function (patient-reported disability; performance-based 6-minute walk-test; objective accelerometer step count); 2) pain and non-adaptive coping (pain during rest and activity, pain-catastrophizing, kinesiophobia); 3) adaptive coping (mindfulness, general coping, pain-resilience); and 4) social-emotional dysfunction (anxiety, depression, social isolation and emotional support). First, we tested the interrelation among the 3 aspects of physical function. Second, we used structural equation modeling to test associations between psychosocial factors (pain and non-adaptive coping, adaptive coping, and social-emotional dysfunction) and each measurement of physical function. RESULTS: <0.001) were associated with patient-reported disability but not to performance-based or objective physical function (ps>0.1). CONCLUSION: Results suggest that patient-reported physical function may provide limited information about patients' physical capacity or ambulatory activity. While pain and non-adaptive reactions to it, adaptive coping, and social-emotional dysfunction may potentially improve patient-reported physical function, additional targets may be needed to improve functional capacity and ambulatory activity. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03412916.

Topics & Concepts

PsychosocialMedicineCoping (psychology)Chronic painAnxietySocial supportComputerized adaptive testingAmbulatoryPhysical therapyClinical psychologyPsychiatryPsychologyInternal medicinePsychometricsPsychotherapistMusculoskeletal pain and rehabilitationPain Mechanisms and TreatmentsPain Management and Opioid Use
&lt;p&gt;Psychosocial Correlates of Objective, Performance-Based, and Patient-Reported Physical Function Among Patients with Heterogeneous Chronic Pain&lt;/p&gt; | Litcius