| Literature DB >> 28640822 |
Opeyemi O Babatunde1, Joanne L Jordan1, Danielle A Van der Windt1, Jonathan C Hill1, Nadine E Foster1, Joanne Protheroe1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Musculoskeletal pain, the most common cause of disability globally, is most frequently managed in primary care. People with musculoskeletal pain in different body regions share similar characteristics, prognosis, and may respond to similar treatments. This overview aims to summarise current best evidence on currently available treatment options for the five most common musculoskeletal pain presentations (back, neck, shoulder, knee and multi-site pain) in primary care.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28640822 PMCID: PMC5480856 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0178621
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Review flow diagram (PRISMA).
Fig 2Quality assessment of contributing evidence from Cochrane reviews.
Fig 3Quality assessment of contributing evidence from non-Cochrane systematic review & meta-analyses.
Summary of findings.
| Treatment Options | Evidence base | Regional pain | Outcomes | Magnitude of Effects | Strength of evidence (Grade) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 clinical guidelines, 1clinical pathway, 8 reviews. | Back, neck, shoulder, knee & multi-site pain. | Pain | Small effect sizes (e.g. -3.2 points (95% CI -5.1, -1.3) on a 0–100 scale for back pain, Oliveira et al. 2012). | |||
| 2 guidelines, 1 clinical pathway, 10 reviews & 2 RCTs. | Back, neck, shoulder, knee & multi-site pain. Limited amount of evidence on shoulder & knee pain. | Pain | Medium to large effect sizes (e.g. MD -5.18; 95% CI -9.79 to -0.57, Henschke et al. 2011) for pain on a scale of 1 to10). | |||
| 4 guidelines, 3 policy documents, 32 reviews, 1 RCT. | Back, neck, shoulder, knee & multi-site pain. | Pain | Medium to large summary effects sizes (e.g. SMD 0.65, 95% CI: -0.09 to 1.39 for multi-site pain, Busch et al 2007, & RR 7.74, 95% CI: 1.97 to 30.32 for shoulder pain, Green et al 2003) | |||
| 3 guidelines & 21 reviews. | Back, neck, & shoulder pain. | Pain | Small effect sizes (e.g. NNT 5, for neck pain, Gross et al. 2012, & MD: -4.16, 95% CI -6.97 to -1.36, on 0–100 point scale for back pain, Rubinstein et al. 2011). | |||
| 3 guidelines, 1 clinical pathway & 30 reviews. | Back, neck, shoulder, knee & multi-site pain. | Pain | Medium effect sizes (e.g. NNT 4.6 (95% CI 3.8 to 5.9 for NSAIDs compared to placebo, Mason et al. 2004). | |||
| 3 guidelines, 1 clinical pathway & 16 reviews. | Back, neck, shoulder, & knee pain. | Pain | Medium to large effect sizes (e.g. RR: 3.11 (95% CI 1.61 to 6.01 using injections for relieving moderate to severe knee pain in the short term compared to placebo, Belamy et al 2006). | |||
| 5 guidelines, 1 clinical pathway, 1 policy document, & 20 reviews. | Back, neck, shoulder & knee pain. | Pain | Small, non-significant or inconsistent, summary effect sizes. | |||
| 1 guideline, clinical pathway document, 17 reviews. | Back, neck, shoulder, knee & multi-site pain. | Pain | Effect sizes (not often estimated). Beneficial effects on pain & function in the short term with little empirical evidence for sustained long-term improvement. | |||
*Very weak evidence: Expert opinions or consensus in guidelines only / Absence of evidence in a single systematic review.
** Limited evidence: Little empirical evidence from systematic reviews/evidence-based guidelines AND when there were small, inconsistent, or non-significant treatment effect sizes.
*** Moderate evidence: little empirical evidence from systematic reviews/evidence-based guidelines (as in limited evidence) but showing a medium to large treatment effect OR in the presence of strong empirical evidence from high quality systematic reviews, but with small or inconsistent treatment effect sizes across systematic reviews.
**** Strong evidence: Strong empirical evidence from high quality systematic reviews and evidence based clinical guidelines AND medium or large effect sizes.