| Literature DB >> 35005340 |
Muhammad Abid Azam1,2, Aliza Z Weinrib1,2, Janice Montbriand1, Lindsay C Burns1,2, Kayla McMillan1, Hance Clarke1, Joel Katz1,2.
Abstract
Background: Chronic postsurgical pain (CPSP) and associated long-term opioid use are major public health concerns. Aims: The Toronto General Hospital Transitional Pain Service (TPS) is a multidisciplinary, hospital-integrated program developed to prevent and manage CPSP and support opioid tapering. This clinical practice-based study reports on preliminary outcomes of the TPS psychology program, which provides acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) to patients at risk for CPSP and persistent opioid use.Entities:
Keywords: acceptance and commitment therapy; anxiety; chronic postsurgical pain; depression; mindfulness; multidisciplinary pain management; pain catastrophizing; pain interference; persistent opioid use
Year: 2017 PMID: 35005340 PMCID: PMC8730651 DOI: 10.1080/24740527.2017.1325317
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Pain ISSN: 2474-0527
Figure 1a.ACT group patients are supported in taking a new perspective on their pain and their responses to pain and developing awareness of their behavioral choices, in order to build a life of meaning and purpose.
Figure 1b.Depiction of an ACT matrix visual diagram for a TPS patient in the ACT group. Lower half represents the inner, private world of the patient, with the right quadrant encapsulating values and important relationships (“what matters”) and left quadrant representing pain and suffering (“what hurts”). Upper half represents the observable world of actions, with the right quadrant signifying meaningful approach behaviors that move patients toward what matters to them (“toward moves”) and left quadrant indicating avoidance behaviors that move patients away from pain and suffering (“away moves”).
Demographic and clinical variables for the two groups of TPS participants.a
| ACT ( | No ACT ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Characteristic | Mean (SD) or % | Mean (SD) or % | ||
| Age (years) | 89 | 48.36 (13.76) | 238 | 53.38 (14.37) |
| Gender | ||||
| Male | 43 | 48.39 | 132 | 44.50 |
| Female | 46 | 51.70 | 106 | 55.50 |
| TPS attendance (weeks)b | 84 | 22.09 (19.96) | 198 | 10.40 (17.80) |
| Medical visits | 85 | 8.11 (7.32) | 199 | 3.42 (4.87) |
| Psychology visits | 91 | 4.90 (6.46) | — | — |
| Number of morbiditiesc | ||||
| None | 1 | 1.12 | 3 | 1.62 |
| 1–3 | 41 | 46.07 | 103 | 55.68 |
| 4–6 | 21 | 23.40 | 61 | 32.97 |
| 7–9 | 9 | 10.11 | 16 | 8.65 |
| ≥10 | 2 | 2.24 | 2 | 1.08 |
| Preoperative chronic pain | ||||
| Yes | 54 | 59.30 | 121 | 48.00 |
| No | 20 | 22.00 | 69 | 27.40 |
| N/Ad | 17 | 18.70 | 62 | 24.60 |
| Preoperative mental health condition | ||||
| Yes | 33 | 41.30 | 33 | 17.40 |
| No | 47 | 58.80 | 157 | 82.60 |
| Preoperative mental health medications | ||||
| Antidepressants | 11 | 12.50 | 16 | 7.30 |
| Anticonvulsants | 6 | 6.80 | 1 | 0.50 |
| Anxiolytics | 13 | 14.80 | 20 | 9.0 |
| SNRI | 8 | 9.10 | 10 | 4.50 |
| SSRI | 6 | 6.80 | 16 | 7.20 |
| Preoperative opioid use | ||||
| Yes | 52 | 58.40 | 113 | 47.10 |
| No | 37 | 41.60 | 127 | 52.90 |
| Preoperative MEDe | 52 | 95.98 (121.04) | 113 | 95.63 (128.09) |
aPercentages are valid percentages.
bTime (in weeks) in between first and last TPS outpatient visits.
cRefers to any chronic health conditions including preexisting chronic pain.
dPreoperative chronic pain status was not available for 86% of patients referred to the TPS after surgery.
eMED 24 h presurgery.
TPS = Transitional Pain Service; ACT = acceptance and commitment therapy; N/A = data not available; SNRI = serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors; SSRI = selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors; MED = morphine equivalent dosage.
Number (%) of patients on opioids at TPS discharge in ACT and no ACT groups according to preoperative opioid use.a
| ACT ( | No ACT ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Preoperative opioid users | ||
| TPS discharge opioid-free | 11 (22.90) | 17 (20.20) |
| TPS discharge on opioids | 37 (77.10) | 67 (79.80) |
| Preoperative opioid-naïve | ||
| TPS discharge opioid-free | 17 (65.40) | 33 (41.80) |
| TPS discharge on opioids | 9 (34.60) | 46 (58.20) |
aPercentages are valid percentages based on available data.
TPS = Transitional Pain Service; ACT = Acceptance and Commitment Therapy.
Mean (SD) values for pain-related variables, mental health variables, and opioid use in the ACT and no ACT groups at the first and last TPS visits.
| ACT ( | No ACT ( | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outcome | First visit | Last visit | First visit | Last visit | ||
| Pain intensitya | 61 | 5.64 (2.33) | 4.69 (2.67) | 159 | 4.93 (2.48) | 4.50 (2.55) |
| Pain interferenceb | 58 | 6.26 (2.39) | 4.79 (2.78) | 147 | 5.81 (2.36) | 5.09 (2.60) |
| Sensitivity to pain traumatizationc | 37 | 22.92 (12.02) | 22.81 (12.60) | 101 | 18.37 (11.76) | 17.65 (11.62) |
| Pain catastrophizingd | 41 | 26.81 (14.82) | 23.28 (15.67) | 112 | 22.61 (14.99) | 20.02 (14.48) |
| Anxiety symptomse | 59 | 10.25 (4.96) | 9.88 (5.25) | 142 | 8.65 (4.61) | 8.13 (4.65) |
| Depressive symptomse | 59 | 10.00 (5.27) | 8.67 (4.96) | 143 | 9.00 (4.92) | 8.66 (4.94) |
| Morphine equivalent dosagef | 82 | 129.18 (146.56) | 76.53 (168.86) | 193 | 78.94 (105.13) | 57.84 (85.58) |
aBrief Pain Inventory Current Pain subscale (numeric rating 0–10).
bBrief Pain Inventory Pain Interference subscale mean.
cSensitivity to Pain Traumatization Scale-12 total score.
dPain Catastrophizing Scale total score.
eHospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, Anxiety or Depression subscale score.
fMorphine equivalent dosage obtained from patient medical charts.
ACT = Acceptance and Commitment Therapy; TPS = Transitional Pain Service.
Figure 2.BPI pain interference scores (mean ± standard error of the mean) shown for the two groups of patients at the first and last TPS visits after hospital discharge. The ACT group (n = 53) showed greater significant reductions in pain interference scores (P < 0.001, effect size = 0.14) compared to the no ACT group (n = 147, P < 0.001, effect size = 0.09).
Figure 3.HADS–depression scores (mean ± standard error of the mean) shown for the two groups of patients at the first and last TPS visits after hospital discharge. Statistically significant interaction showed that the ACT group (n = 59, P = 0.001, = 0.05) had significant reductions in depressive symptoms. Depressive symptom scores: 8–10 mild; 11–15 moderate; >16 severe.
Figure 4.Daily opioid consumption in morphine equivalent dose (mean ± standard error of the mean) shown for the two groups of patients at the first and last TPS visits after hospital discharge. The ACT group had significantly higher opioid use at the first TPS visit than the no ACT group (P < 0.001, effect size = 0.19) and showed greater significant reductions in opioid use by the last TPS visit (P < 0.001). ACT n = 82; no ACT n = 193.