| Literature DB >> 29643612 |
Ayah Ismail1, Catherine Moore1, Natasha Alshishani1, Khalid Yaseen1, Mansour Abdullah Alshehri1.
Abstract
[Purpose] To investigate the effectiveness of cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) and pain coping skills training (PCST) on pain level in adults with osteoarthritis of the knee (KOA) in comparison with usual care.Entities:
Keywords: Cognitive-behavioural therapy; Knee pain; Osteoarthritis
Year: 2017 PMID: 29643612 PMCID: PMC5890238 DOI: 10.1589/jpts.29.2228
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Phys Ther Sci ISSN: 0915-5287
Fig. 1.PRISMA flowchart of study selection.
PEDro score for each included studies
| Study | Items of PEDro score | Total score | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | ||
| Somers et al., 2012 | + | + | + | + | - | - | + | - | + | + | + | 7/10 |
| Helminen et al., 2014 | + | + | + | + | - | - | - | + | + | + | + | 7/10 |
| Smith et al., 2015 | + | + | - | + | + | + | + | - | + | + | + | 8/10 |
| Bennell et al., 2016 | + | + | + | + | - | - | + | - | + | + | + | 7/10 |
| Item criteria | ||||||||||||
| 1. Eligibility criteria were specified. | ||||||||||||
| The total score was defined by the number of positive (+) items. | ||||||||||||
Characteristics of included studies
| Citation | Effect name | Participants | Total N | Intervention group | Comparison group(s) | Follow up period |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Somers et al., 2012 | PCST | Adults (20–85 years); Overweight or obese (BMI ≥25 and ≤42); knee pain in the most days in the prior 6 months; radiographic evidence of KOA (unilateral or bilateral) based on K–L score | N=232 PCST & BWM, n=62PCST, n=60BWM, n=59Standard care, n=51 | -PCST course was delivered over 24 weeks. A weekly session in the
first 12 weeks. A session every other week in the last 12 weeks. The session
duration is one hour. | -Standard care control. | 24-week6-month12-month2- years |
| Helminen et al., 2014 | CBT | Adults (35–75 years); knee pain in the most days in the last year; radiographic evidence of KOA based on K–L score; one week prior to the study the knee pain was (≥40 on a 100-mm) in the pain subscale of the (WOMAC) index | N=111GP care & CBT, n=55GP care, n=56 | CBT was delivered over a period of 6 weeks (1 session/week)
according to Linton’s model | GP care | 3-month12-month |
| Smith et al., 2015 | CBT-I | Adults (mean age=59.2 ± 9.9 years); met the criteria for insomnia disorder; met the American College of Rheumatology criteria for the classification of KOA; knee pain experienced 5 days/week for 6 months; radiographic evidence of KOA K–L score | N=100CBT-I, n=50BD, n=50 | CBT-I was delivered in 8 sessions (45 minute/session). | Behavioural desensitization (active placebo) | Post-treatment 3-month6-month |
| Bennell et al., 2016 | PCST | Adults (≥50 years); fulfilled the American College of Rheumatology criteria (pain on most days in the past month and radio- graphic changes); knee pain ≥3 months; average pain during previous week ≥40 on 100-mm VAS; at least moderate difficulty with daily activities: WOMAC physical function subscale ≥25 of 68 units | N=222PCST & exercise, n=73Exercise, n=75PCST, n=74 | -PCST sessions (10 session) were delivered over a 12-week period
(45 minute/ session). | Exercise (strengthening exercises). Ten sessions over a 12-week period (25 minute/ session). | 12-weeks32-week52-week |
PCST: Pain Coping Skills Training; CBT: Cognitive Behavioural Therapy; CBT-I: Cognitive Behavioural Therapy For Insomnia; BMI: Body Mass Index; K–L: Kellgren-Lawrence score; WOMAC: the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities osteoarthritis index; BWM: Behavioural Wight Management; BD: Behavioural desensitization; VAS: Visual Analog Scale.
Treatment outcomes according to the WOMAC pain subscale
| Study | Intervention | Mean difference | % Change from baseline | Effect size | MCII achieved | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-treatment | 12-month | Between | |||||
| Somers et al., 2012 | PCST +BWM | 47.7 (22.5) | 27.2 (13.05) | −20.5 | −43% | 0.77$ | Yes |
| PCST only | 42.8 (20.16) | 34.5 (14.62) | −8.3 | −19.4% | 0.25 | No | |
| BWM only | 42.6 (19.2) | 35.5 (13.9) | −0.71 | −16.7% | 0.18 | No | |
| Standard care* | 43.3 (22.04) | 38.0 (14.03) | −5.3 | −12.2% | - | No | |
| Helminen et al., 2014 | CBT | 57.6 (13.4) | 35.6 (20.2) | −22 | −38.2% | 0.18 | Yes |
| GP care* | 56.4 (13.6) | 39.5 (22.0) | −16.9 | −30% | - | No | |
| Smith et al., 2015 | CBT-I | 46.5 (20) | 40.3 (23.8) ¶ | −6.2 | −13.3% | 0.18 | No |
| BD* | 49.7 (24.5) | 35.4 (27.5) ¶ | −14.3 | −28.8% | - | No | |
| Bennell et al., 2016 | PCST +exercise | 45 (14) | 26 (16.5) | −19 | −42.2% | 0.06 | Yes |
| PCST only | 43.5 (14) | 29 (15) | −14.5 | −33% | 0.12 | No | |
| Exercise only* | 43 (13.5) | 27 (17) | −16 | −37.2% | - | No | |
Mean difference score calculated according to (0–100) scale. MICC: Minimally Clinically Important Improvement in WOMAC pain subscale [−40.8% or −19.9 scale]; ¶ Post-treatment average after 6-month follow-up time point; * Control group for effect size; $ considered a >0.75 moderate to large effect; WOMAC: the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities osteoarthritis index; PCST: Pain Coping Skills Training; BWM: Behavioural Wight Management; CBT: Cognitive Behavioural Therapy; CBT-I: Cognitive Behavioural Therapy For Insomnia; BD: Behavioural desensitization; CMD: Clinically meaningful difference.
Summary of statistical findings
| Study | Summary of findings | Reviewer comment |
|---|---|---|
| Somers et al., 2012 | The PCST & BWM group scored the lowest post-treatment score in the WOMAC pain subscale when compared to the other three groups. That was followed by PCST, then BWM and finally standard care. PCST & BWM differed significantly from BWM-only, PCST-only, and standard care, p value=0.002; 0.01; 0.0002 respectively. | The p value of comparing PCST-only with BWM-only and standard care were not reported. |
| Helminen et al., 2014 | The WOMAC pain score was slightly lower in the intervention group than the control at the two follow up points. No significant difference was found for pain in comparing the effect of CBT and GP care with the GP care only (p value=0.332). | The study did not fulfil any of the blinding items (i.e. subjects, therapist, and assessor) in performing the RCT. |
| Smith et al., 2015 | The WOMAC pain subscale decreased from baseline to the 6-month assessment in all patients (p>0.001). No statistical difference between CBT-I and BD at 6-month (p value=0.13). | Intervention and placebo not fully described. |
| Bennell et al., 2016 | PCST & exercise was more efficacious than PCST only at the 12-week and 32-week follow up (p<0.01) and (p<0.05) respectively. | The p value of comparing PCST-only with exercise was not reported. |