BACKGROUND Pain chronicity is considered an important prognostic factor for outcome. Here, it was investigated whether pain duration influences outcome when only chronic patients (pain > three months) are considered.… Click to show full abstract
BACKGROUND Pain chronicity is considered an important prognostic factor for outcome. Here, it was investigated whether pain duration influences outcome when only chronic patients (pain > three months) are considered. Secondary aims were to determine, in patients of any pain duration, how much variance in outcome is explained by pain duration and whether pain duration truly predicts outcomes, i.e. out-of-sample prediction in independent data. METHODS Secondary analysis of a cohort study of neck pain patients. Patients were assessed before start of treatment and at one week, one, three, six- and 12-months follow-up. Outcomes were Patient Global Impression of Change (PGIC) and percent change of patients' perceived pain intensity, rated on a numerical rating scale (NRS). Regression analyses (linear and logistic) and supervised machine learning were used to test the influence of pain duration on PGIC and percent NRS change at one week, one, three, six- and 12-months follow-up within sample and out-of-sample. Separate analyses were performed for the full sample (n=720) and for chronic patients (n=238) only. RESULTS No relationship between pain duration and outcome was found for chronic patients only. For the full sample, statistical relationships between pain duration and outcomes were observed at all tested follow-up time points. However, the amount of variance in outcome explained by pain duration was low and no out-of-sample prediction was possible. CONCLUSIONS Pain duration did not emerge as an important predictor of outcome in this database of 720 neck pain patients receiving chiropractic treatment.
               
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