4.6 Article

Pain Self-Efficacy (PSEQ) score of < 22 is associated with daily opioid use, back pain, disability, and PROMIS scores in patients presenting for spine surgery

Journal

SPINE JOURNAL
Volume 23, Issue 5, Pages 723-730

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.spinee.2022.12.015

Keywords

Daily opioid use; Disability; Elective spine surgery; Opioids; Pain self-efficacy; Patient-reported outcomes; Pain; PROMIS score; Resilience

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Pain self-efficacy is associated with daily opioid use in patients presenting for spine surgery. A cutoff score of <22 on the Pain Self-Efficacy Questionnaire is predictive of daily opioid use and is associated with greater pain, disability, fatigue, and depression.
BACKGROUND CONTEXT: Pain self-efficacy, or the belief that one can carry out activities despite pain, has been shown to be associated with back and neck pain severity. However, the liter-ature correlating psychosocial factors to opioid use, barriers to proper opioid use, and Patient -Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS) scores is sparse. PURPOSE: The primary aim of this study was to determine whether pain self-efficacy is associ-ated with daily opioid use in patients presenting for spine surgery. The secondary aim was to deter-mine whether there exists a threshold self-efficacy score that is predictive of daily preoperative opioid use and subsequently to correlate this threshold score with opioid beliefs, disability, resil-ience, patient activation, and PROMIS scores.PATIENT SAMPLE: Five hundred seventy-eight elective spine surgery patients (286 females; mean age of 55 years) from a single institution were included in this study. STUDY DESIGN/SETTING: Retrospective review of prospectively collected data.OUTCOME MEASURES: PROMIS scores, daily opioid use, opioid beliefs, disability, patient activation, resilience. METHODS: Elective spine surgery patients at a single institution completed questionnaires preop-eratively. Pain self-efficacy was measured by the Pain Self-Efficacy Questionnaire (PSEQ). Threshold linear regression with Bayesian information criteria was utilized to identify the optimal threshold associated with daily opioid use. Multivariable analysis controlled for age, sex, educa-tion, income, and Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) and PROMIS-29, version 2 scores. RESULTS: Of 578 patients, 100 (17.3%) reported daily opioid use. Threshold regression identified a PSEQ cutoff score of <22 as predictive of daily opioid use. On multivariable logistic regression, patients with a PSEQ score <22 had two times greater odds of being daily opioid users than those with a score >= 22. Further, PSEQ <22 was associated with lower patient activation; increased leg and back pain; higher ODI; higher PROMIS pain, fatigue, depression, and sleep scores; and lower PROMIS physical function and social satisfaction scores (p<.05 for all).CONCLUSIONS: In patients presenting for elective spine surgery, a PSEQ score of <22 is associ-ated with twice the odds of reporting daily opioid use. Further, this threshold is associated with greater pain, disability, fatigue, and depression. A PSEQ score <22 can identify patients at high risk for daily opioid use and can guide targeted rehabilitation to optimize postoperative quality of life.(c) 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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