4.5 Article

Validation of a modified version of the Brief Pain Inventory for painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy

Journal

JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT
Volume 29, Issue 4, Pages 401-410

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2004.06.018

Keywords

pain assessment; neuropathic pain; diabetic peripheral neuropathy; Brief Pain Inventory

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Neuropathic pain is the focus of current clinical research, clinical identification, and treatment. It is unique from nociceptive pain and requires evaluation of the relevance and utility of common pain, measures created for other painful conditions. This study evaluated the psychometric properties of a modified Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) for patients with painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy (BPI-DPN). Participants were patients with painful DPAT (n - 255) enrolled in a DPN Burden of Illness survey referred through 17 outpatient settings (primary care physicians, endocrinologists, neurologists, and anesthesiologists). Patients completed. the BPI-DPN, and self-report, ineasures of health-related quality of life, mood sleep, and healthcare utilization. Construct, criterion and discriminant validity, and internal consistency reliability were evaluated. Principal axis factoring with oblimin rotation revealed two interpretable factors (eigenvalues > 1.0), consistent with most published BPI validation studies; a severity scale comprising the four BPI Severity items and an interference scale comprising the seven Interference items, which satisfied criteria for interpretability and model fit. Cronbach's alpha, was high (0.94) for both scales. Mean pain Severity was highly correlated with Bodily Pain from the Medical Outcomes Study Short Form-12, version 2 (r(s) = 0. 63, P < 0. 001), the Pain/Discomfort item in the Euro-QoL (r(s) = 0.58, P < 0. 001), and a verbal rating scale measure of pain severity (r(s) = 0. 74. P < 0. 001). Individual BPI-DPN Interference domains were moderately correlated (r(s)'s > 0.5, P < 0.001) with, analogous measures, and the Sleep Interference item had a high, significant, association with the three Primary Medical Outcome Study-Sleep scale subscales (r(s)'s = 0.66-77, P < 0.001). Worst Pain and Interference ratings were significantly associated with hospital utilization and outpatient visits due to DPN. These results replicate, in a pure peripheral neuropathic pain condition, the BPI psychometric characieristics documented in populations with nociceptive or mixed pain conditions. The BPI-DPN is a promising instrument in the evaluation of painful DPN. J Pain Symptom Manage 2005;29:401-410. (c) 2005 U.S. Cancer Pain Relief Committee. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available