Identifying At-Risk Subgroups for Acute Postsurgical Pain: A Classification Tree Analysis

Abstract Objective Acute postsurgical pain is common and has potentially negative long-term consequences for patients. In this study, we evaluated effects of presurgery sociodemographics, pain experiences, psychological influences, and surgery-related variables on acute postsurgical pain using logis...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pain medicine (Malden, Mass.) Mass.), 2018-11, Vol.19 (11), p.2283-2295
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Yang, Liu, Zejun, Chen, Shuanghong, Ye, Xiaoxuan, Xie, Wenyi, Hu, Chunrong, Iezzi, Tony, Jackson, Todd
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Objective Acute postsurgical pain is common and has potentially negative long-term consequences for patients. In this study, we evaluated effects of presurgery sociodemographics, pain experiences, psychological influences, and surgery-related variables on acute postsurgical pain using logistic regression vs classification tree analysis (CTA). Design The study design was prospective. Setting This study was carried out at Chongqing No. 9 hospital, Chongqing, China. Subjects Patients (175 women, 84 men) completed a self-report battery 24 hours before surgery (T1) and pain intensity ratings 48–72 hours after surgery (T2). Results An initial logistic regression analysis identified pain self-efficacy as the only presurgery predictor of postoperative pain intensity. Subsequently, a classification tree analysis (CTA) indicated that lower vs higher acute postoperative pain intensity levels were predicted not only by pain self-efficacy but also by its interaction with disease onset, pain catastrophizing, and body mass index. CTA results were replicated within a revised logistic regression model. Conclusions Together, these findings underscored the potential utility of CTA as a means of identifying patient subgroups with higher and lower risk for severe acute postoperative pain based on interacting characteristics.
ISSN:1526-2375
1526-4637
DOI:10.1093/pm/pnx339