评定量表
结果(博弈论)
观察研究
医学
物理疗法
腰椎
腰痛
临床试验
心理干预
心理学
内科学
外科
精神科
发展心理学
病理
数理经济学
替代医学
数学
作者
Matthias Müller-Schrader,Jakob Heinzle,Alfred E. Müller,Christian Lanz,Oliver Häussler,Martin Sutter,Andreas Eggspühler,Stefania Mare,Birte Toussaint,Inês Pereira,Frederike H. Petzschner,Katja Wiech,Jürgen Barth,Claudia M. Witt,Klaas Ε. Stephan,Zina‐Mary Manjaly
出处
期刊:Pain
[Lippincott Williams & Wilkins]
日期:2022-05-10
卷期号:164 (1): 132-141
被引量:6
标识
DOI:10.1097/j.pain.0000000000002674
摘要
Abstract Subjective expectations are known to be associated with clinical outcomes. However, expectations exist about different aspects of recovery, and few studies have focused on expectations about specific treatments. Here, we present results from a prospective observational study of patients receiving lumbar steroid injections against low back pain (N = 252). Patients completed questionnaires directly before ( ), directly after ( ), and 2 weeks after ( ) the injection. In addition to pain intensity, we assessed expectations (and certainty therein) about treatment effects, using both numerical rating scale (NRS) and the Expectation for Treatment Scale (ETS). Regression models were used to explain (within-sample) treatment outcome (pain intensity at ) based on pain levels, expectations, and certainty at and . Using cross-validation, we examined the models' ability to predict (out-of-sample) treatment outcome. Pain intensity significantly decreased ( P < 10 −15 ) 2 weeks after injections, with a reduction of the median NRS score from 6 to 3. Numerical Rating Scale measures of pain, expectation, and certainty from jointly explained treatment outcome ( P < 10 −15 , R 2 = 0.31). Expectations at explained outcome on its own ( P < 10 −10 ) and enabled out-of-sample predictions about outcome ( P < 10 −4 ), with a median error of 1.36 on a 0 to 10 NRS. Including measures from did not significantly improve models. Using the ETS as an alternative measurement of treatment expectations (sensitivity analysis) gave consistent results. Our results demonstrate that treatment expectations play an important role for clinical outcome after lumbar injections and may represent targets for concomitant cognitive interventions. Predicting outcomes based on simple questionnaires might be useful to support treatment selection.
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