| Literature DB >> 29361982 |
Vikki Wylde1,2, Nicholas Howells3, Wendy Bertram4,3, Andrew J Moore4, Julie Bruce5, Candy McCabe6, Ashley W Blom4,7, Jane Dennis4, Amanda Burston4, Rachael Gooberman-Hill4,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Approximately 20% of people who have total knee replacement experience chronic pain afterwards, but there is little evidence about effective interventions for managing this type of pain. This article describes the systematic development and refinement of a complex intervention for people with chronic pain after knee replacement. The intervention is a care pathway involving an assessment clinic and onward referral, with telephone follow-up as required. In the design of this multistage study, we chose to focus on ensuring that the intervention was deliverable, implementable and acceptable.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic pain; Complex intervention development; Total knee replacement
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29361982 PMCID: PMC5781277 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-017-2391-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Overview of the intervention development process
Stage 1 – health professionals’ (n = 22) appropriateness ratings for components included within the trial intervention
| Component | Mean ratinga | Range |
|---|---|---|
| Assessment clinic | ||
| Clinics should be held with patients who have pain at 3 months or more after knee replacement | 7.0 | 4–9 |
| Assessment should be tailored to each individual patient | 8.5 | 6–9 |
| Conducted by a nurse or extended scope practitioner | 7.5 | 5–9 |
| Treatment should be guided by standardised assessment of pain | 7.6 | 6–9 |
| Standardised assessment of pain includes assessment of pain severity and impact | 8.0 | 5–9 |
| Possible onward referral pathways | ||
| Monitoring (by a nurse or self-monitoring) as treatment | 7.0 | 4–9 |
| Referral to surgeon if signs of infection, malalignment or instability | 8.5 | 6–9 |
| Referral to General Practitioner if signs of depression | 7.7 | 4–9 |
| Referral to pain specialist if severe or interfering pain with indications of neuropathic or complex regional pain syndrome | 7.9 | 5–9 |
aMean appropriateness ratings ranked from 1 to 9 (not appropriate to very appropriate)
Stage 1 and 2 – refinements made to the care pathway
| Issue identified | Changes made to address this issue |
|---|---|
| Patients need to be identified earlier to ensure that treatment is initiated at 3 months post-operation. | Screening of patients to identify those with pain brought forward to 2 months post-operation to allow patients to be seen promptly at 3 months post-operation. A second screening process will occur prior to the assessment appointment to ensure that patients still have pain. |
| Patients who are offered nurse-led or self-monitoring need to be regularly followed up and referred to other services if needed. | ‘Monitoring ‘changed to ‘follow-up’. Patients will be offered regular telephone follow-up with a health professional and further referrals if pain does not improve. |
| Physiotherapy should be a treatment option. | Physiotherapy included as a referral pathway. |
| There are additional ‘red flags’ that should initiate an urgent referral to a surgeon. | Knee stiffness or patellofemoral joint problems will initiate an urgent referral to an orthopaedic surgeon. |
| Patients with anxiety should be referred to their General Practitioner. | Signs of anxiety will initiate a General Practitioner referral for review and treatment. |
| Treatment of neuropathic pain should begin as soon as possible after assessment, ideally while waiting for pain clinic appointment. | Patients with signs of neuropathic pain will be referred to their General Practitioner to initiate medication treatment. If there is no improvement in 6 weeks, patients will be referred to a pain specialist. |
| Referrals to pain services needs to be via General Practitioner. | General Practitioners will be asked to request an urgent referral to pain services for patients who meet the diagnostic criteria for complex regional pain syndrome. |
Stage 3 – changes to the care pathway design and processes
| Issue identified | Changes made to address this issue |
|---|---|
| DN-4 (neuropathic pain measure) did not identify all patients with clinical symptoms of a neuropathic component to their pain. | Addition of PainDETECT to the clinic assessment questionnaire and trial questionnaires. |
| Inconsistencies in the assessment of knee stiffness between the orthopaedic surgeon and extended scope practitioner. | Extended scope practitioners to be provided with a goniometer for the assessment of range of motion. |
| Complexity around diagnosing complex regional pain syndrome. | The intervention training manual and the training session will highlight the importance of referring patients if complex regional pain syndrome is suspected, even if formal criteria are not met, to allow for a specialist assessment. |
| X-ray film was inadequate to allow assessment of alignment (due to rotation). | Guidance provided in the intervention training manual on standardised wording to use when ordering X-rays. Training will be provided to extended scope practitioners on how to identify a rotated X-ray film. |
Stage 3 – patient responses (n = 8) to questions about the acceptability of the assessment clinics
| Yes | No | Comments | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Did you receive adequate information about the clinics beforehand? | 8 | 0 | |
| Did you feel that it was appropriate that this appointment was held at a hospital? | 7 | 1 | Parking at hospital difficult |
| Was the length of the clinic acceptable? | 6 | 2 | Surgeon delayed because previous clinic overran |
| Were the examinations that were performed on your knee acceptable? | 8 | 0 | |
| Were the written questionnaires that you completed during the clinic acceptable? | 7 | 1 | Some questions seemed contradictory |
| Were the questions that you were asked by the health professional acceptable? | 8 | 0 | |
| Are there any aspects of the clinics that you think could you improved? | 1 | 7 | The amount of time spent waiting |