| Literature DB >> 31546598 |
Riccardo Compagnoni1,2, Roberta Gualtierotti3, Francesco Luceri4, Fabio Sciancalepore5, Pietro Simone Randelli6.
Abstract
Fibromyalgia is a common musculoskeletal syndrome characterized by chronic widespread pain and other systemic manifestations, which has demonstrated a contribution to higher postoperative analgesic consumption to other surgeries such as hysterectomies and knee and hip replacements. The aim of this review is to search current literature for studies considering the impact of fibromyalgia on clinical outcomes of patients undergoing shoulder surgery. A systematic literature review was conducted in PubMed/Medline, Embase, and ClinicalTrials.gov in February 2019. Studies were selected based on the following participants, interventions, comparisons, outcomes, and study design criteria: adult patients undergoing surgery for shoulder pain (P); diagnosis of fibromyalgia (I); patients without fibromyalgia (C); outcome of surgery in terms of pain or analgesic or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs consumption (O); case series, retrospective studies, observational studies, open-label studies, randomized clinical trials, systematic reviews and meta-analyses were included (S). Authors found 678 articles, of which four were found eligible. One retrospective study showed that patients with fibromyalgia had worse clinical postoperative outcomes; two retrospective studies reported a higher opioid prescription in patients with fibromyalgia and one prospective observational study found that a higher fibromyalgia survey score correlated with lower quality of recovery scores two days after surgery. The scarce and low-quality evidence available does not allow confirming that fibromyalgia has an impact on postoperative outcomes in shoulder surgery. Future studies specifically focusing on shoulder surgery outcomes may help improvement and personalization of the management of patients with fibromyalgia syndrome (PROSPERO 2019, CRD42019121180).Entities:
Keywords: arthroplasty; arthroscopy; fibromyalgia; shoulder; surgery
Year: 2019 PMID: 31546598 PMCID: PMC6832346 DOI: 10.3390/jcm8101518
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Fibromyalgia diagnostic criteria—2016 revision.
|
| ||||
| Left upper region (Region 1) □ | Right upper region (Region 2) □ | |||
| □ | Jaw * | □ | ||
| □ | Shoulder girdle | □ | ||
| □ | Upper arm | □ | ||
| □ | Lower arm | □ | ||
| Left lower region (Region 3) □ | Right lower region (Region 4) □ | |||
| □ | Hip (buttock, trochanter) | □ | ||
| □ | Upper leg | □ | ||
| □ | Lower leg | □ | ||
| Axial region (Region 5) | ||||
| Neck | □ | |||
| Upper back | □ | |||
| Lower back | □ | |||
| Chest or breast * | □ | |||
| Abdomen * | □ | |||
| Total score (0-19): ______ | ||||
|
| ||||
| 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | |
| Fatigue | □ | □ | □ | □ |
| Waking unrefreshed | □ | □ | □ | □ |
| Cognitive symptoms | □ | □ | □ | □ |
| Present | ||||
| Headaches | □ | |||
| Pain/cramps in lower abdomen | □ | |||
| Depression | □ | |||
| Total score (0-12): ______ | ||||
For Widespread Pain Index (WPI): note the number of areas and the number of regions in which the patient has had pain over the last week. For the symptom severity scale (SSS) score: for each of the 3 symptoms (fatigue, waking unrefreshed, and cognitive symptoms) indicate the level of severity over the past week using the following scale: 0 = no problem; 1 = slight or mild problems, generally mild or intermittent; 2 = moderate, considerable problems, often present and/or at a moderate level; 3 = severe: pervasive, continuous, life-disturbing problems. SSS is the sum of the severity scores of the 3 symptoms (0–9) plus the sum (0–3) of the score of the presence of the following symptoms the patient refers over the past 6 months: (1) headaches; (2) pain or cramps in lower abdomen; (3) depression. Fibromyalgia severity scale is the sum of WPI and SSS. Criteria are satisfied if all conditions are met: (1) WPI ≥ 7 and SSS score ≥ 5 or WPI 4–6 and SSS score ≥ 9. (2) Generalized pain, defined as pain in at least 4 of 5 regions. (3) Symptoms generally present for at least 3 months. (4) A diagnosis of fibromyalgia does not exclude the presence of other clinically important illnesses. * Jaw, chest, and abdominal pain are not included in generalized pain definition.
Figure 1Flowchart of the study.
Summary and comparison of search results.
| Author | Study Design | Sample Size | Type of Intervention | Outcomes | Conclusions | Follow-Up Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blonna et al. [ | Retrospective observational | 286 patients, including 18 with fibromyalgia, of which 5 underwent surgery (11 joints) | Orthopedic evaluation for shoulder pain and shoulder surgery | Diagnosis of fibromyalgia, new OSS, SF-12, and global SOD score | Fibromyalgia may be a cause of failure in the treatment of concomitant painful shoulder. | 15 months (range: 12–27 months) |
| Cheng et al. [ | Prospective observational | 100 patients | Any type of shoulder arthroscopy | Opioid consumption, pain scores, neuropathic pain (PainDETECT), physical functioning (PROMIS), Quality of Recovery-9 | A higher FSS does not correlate with postoperative opioid consumption, but with a lower 2nd-day postoperative Quality of Recovery-9 score. | 14 days |
| Westermann et al. [ | Retrospective case control | 35,155 shoulder arthroscopies, including 7884 with myalgia or fibromyalgia | Arthroscopy for rotator cuff repair | Postoperative opioid prescriptions | Significantly more opioid prescriptions in fibromyalgia patients | 12 months |
| Rao et al. [ | Retrospective large database analysis | 4243 surgery procedures in 3996 patients, including 92 with fibromyalgia | Elective shoulder arthroplasty | Postoperative opioid consumption | Higher opioid prescription in patients with fibromyalgia in the later rehabilitation period | 360 days |
FSS: fibromyalgia survey score, OSS: Oxford shoulder score, SF-12: short form-12; SOD: summary outcome determination.
Newcastle–Ottawa assessment scale scores for the included studies.
| Newcastle–Ottawa Quality Assessment Scale | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Selection | Comparability | Outcome | ||||||
| Author | Representativeness of the Exposed Cohort | Selection of the Non-Exposed Cohort | Ascertainment of Exposure | Demonstration that Outcome of Interest Was Not Present at the Start of Study | Comparability of Cohorts on the Basis of the Design or Analysis | Assessment of Outcome | Was Follow-Up Long Enough for Outcome to Occur? | Adequacy of Follow Up of Cohorts |
| Blonna et al. [ | Truly representative ★ | n/a | Surgical records ★ | Yes ★ | n/a | Self-reported outcomes and medical records ★ | Yes ★ | n/a |
| Cheng et al. [ | Truly representative ★ | n/a | Surgical records ★ | Yes ★ | n/a | Self-reported outcomes and medical records ★ | No | n/a |
| Westermann et al. [ | Fibromyalgia diagnosis based on ICD-9 | n/a | Surgical records ★ | Yes ★ | n/a | Medical records ★ | Yes ★ | n/a |
| Rao et al. [ | No description of fibromyalgia criteria | n/a | Surgical records ★ | Yes ★ | n/a | Medical records ★ | Yes ★ | n/a |
ICD-9: International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision; n/a: not applicable because not studies comparing different cohorts.