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Research ArticleArticles

Measuring Pain and Efficacy of Pain Treatment in Inflammatory Arthritis: A Systematic Literature Review

MATTHIAS ENGLBRECHT, INGO H. TARNER, DÉSIRÉE M. van der HEIJDE, BERNHARD MANGER, CLAIRE BOMBARDIER and ULF MÜLLER-LADNER
The Journal of Rheumatology Supplement September 2012, 90 3-10; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3899/jrheum.120335
MATTHIAS ENGLBRECHT
From the Department of Internal Medicine 3, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany; Department of Internal Medicine and Rheumatology, Justus-Liebig University Giessen; Department of Rheumatology, Clinical Immunology, Osteology and Physical Medicine, Kerckhoff Klinik Bad Nauheim, Bad Nauheim, Germany; Rheumatology Department, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The Netherlands; and Institute for Work and Health, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
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  • For correspondence: matthias.englbrecht@uk-erlangen.de
INGO H. TARNER
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DÉSIRÉE M. van der HEIJDE
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BERNHARD MANGER
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CLAIRE BOMBARDIER
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ULF MÜLLER-LADNER
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Abstract

Objective. To systematically review the available literature on measuring pain and the efficacy of pain treatment in inflammatory arthritis (IA), as an evidence base for generating clinical practice recommendations.

Methods. A systematic literature search was performed in Medline, Embase, Cochrane Library, and the American College of Rheumatology/European League Against Rheumatism 2008/2009 meeting abstracts, searching for studies evaluating clinimetric properties of pain measurement tools in IA (convergent validity, internal consistency, retest reliability, responsiveness, feasibility, and standardization). Studies that presented information on these properties were reviewed and their data were integrated into the pool of results available for pain measures in IA.

Results. In total, 51 articles were included in the review. Validated information on pain was available for tools covering different facets such as overall pain, anatomically specific pain, or a mixture of both. Data from these studies showed that single pain-related items such as the visual analog scale (VAS), numeric rating scale (NRS), or verbal rating scale (VRS) provide sufficient clinimetric information. Similar results were obtained for the pain subscales of the Arthritis Impact Measurement Scales (AIMS/AIMS2) and the bodily pain subscale of the Medical Outcome Study Short-Form Survey 36. Most clinimetric coefficients showed acceptable results with respect to validity, reliability, and sensitivity to change, while the degree of standardization and feasibility mostly filled at least 2 of 3 predefined criteria.

Conclusion. A variety of pain measures are available to cover different aspects of pain such as intensity, frequency, or location. Single-item tools such as VAS, NRS, or VRS can be recommended to measure overall pain in clinical practice. If more specific issues need to be addressed, more sophisticated tools should be taken into account.

Key Indexing Terms:
  • PAIN MEASUREMENT
  • PAIN
  • ARTHRITIS
  • VALIDITY
  • RELIABILITY
  • PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES
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Vol. 90
1 Sep 2012
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Measuring Pain and Efficacy of Pain Treatment in Inflammatory Arthritis: A Systematic Literature Review
MATTHIAS ENGLBRECHT, INGO H. TARNER, DÉSIRÉE M. van der HEIJDE, BERNHARD MANGER, CLAIRE BOMBARDIER, ULF MÜLLER-LADNER
The Journal of Rheumatology Supplement Sep 2012, 90 3-10; DOI: 10.3899/jrheum.120335

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Measuring Pain and Efficacy of Pain Treatment in Inflammatory Arthritis: A Systematic Literature Review
MATTHIAS ENGLBRECHT, INGO H. TARNER, DÉSIRÉE M. van der HEIJDE, BERNHARD MANGER, CLAIRE BOMBARDIER, ULF MÜLLER-LADNER
The Journal of Rheumatology Supplement Sep 2012, 90 3-10; DOI: 10.3899/jrheum.120335
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