Clinical course and prognosis of musculoskeletal pain in patients referred for physiotherapy: does pain site matter?

Abstract Background Danish patients with musculoskeletal disorders are commonly referred for primary care physiotherapy treatment but little is known about their general health status, pain diagnoses, clinical course and prognosis. The objectives of this study were to 1) describe the clinical course...

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Main Authors: Nils-Bo de Vos Andersen, Peter Kent, Jakob Hjort, David Høyrup Christiansen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-03-01
Series:BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12891-017-1487-3
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spelling doaj-6dc0afc718dc46f7b0b6c1aeb809e0822020-11-25T00:46:08ZengBMCBMC Musculoskeletal Disorders1471-24742017-03-0118111110.1186/s12891-017-1487-3Clinical course and prognosis of musculoskeletal pain in patients referred for physiotherapy: does pain site matter?Nils-Bo de Vos Andersen0Peter Kent1Jakob Hjort2David Høyrup Christiansen3Primary Health Care and Quality ImprovementSchool of Physiotherapy and Exercise Science, Curtin UniversityDepartment of Clinical Medicine, HEALTH, Aarhus UniversityDepartment of Occupational Medicine, Regional Hospital West Jutland–University Research ClinicAbstract Background Danish patients with musculoskeletal disorders are commonly referred for primary care physiotherapy treatment but little is known about their general health status, pain diagnoses, clinical course and prognosis. The objectives of this study were to 1) describe the clinical course of patients with musculoskeletal disorders referred to physiotherapy, 2) identify predictors associated with a satisfactory outcome, and 3) determine the influence of the primary pain site diagnosis relative to those predictors. Methods This was a prospective cohort study of patients (n = 2,706) newly referred because of musculoskeletal pain to 30 physiotherapy practices from January 2012 to May 2012. Data were collected via a web-based questionnaire 1–2 days prior to the first physiotherapy consultation and at 6 weeks, 3 and 6 months, from clinical records (including primary musculoskeletal symptom diagnosis based on the ICPC-2 classification system), and from national registry data. The main outcome was the Patient Acceptable Symptom State. Potential predictors were analysed using backwards step-wise selection during longitudinal Generalised Estimating Equation regression modelling. To assess the influence of pain site on these associations, primary pain site diagnosis was added to the model. Results Of the patients included, 66% were female and the mean age was 48 (SD 15). The percentage of patients reporting their symptoms as acceptable was 32% at 6 weeks, 43% at 3 months and 52% at 6 months. A higher probability of satisfactory outcome was associated with place of residence, being retired, no compensation claim, less frequent pain, shorter duration of pain, lower levels of disability and fear avoidance, better mental health and being a non-smoker. Primary pain site diagnosis had little influence on these associations, and was not predictive of a satisfactory outcome. Conclusion Only half of the patients rated their symptoms as acceptable at 6 months. Although satisfactory outcome was difficult to predict at an individual patient level, there were a number of prognostic factors that were associated with this outcome. These factors should be considered when developing generic prediction tools to assess the probability of satisfactory outcome in musculoskeletal physiotherapy patients, because the site of pain did not affect that prognostic association.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12891-017-1487-3Musculoskeletal painPhysiotherapyCohort studyPrognosis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nils-Bo de Vos Andersen
Peter Kent
Jakob Hjort
David Høyrup Christiansen
spellingShingle Nils-Bo de Vos Andersen
Peter Kent
Jakob Hjort
David Høyrup Christiansen
Clinical course and prognosis of musculoskeletal pain in patients referred for physiotherapy: does pain site matter?
BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders
Musculoskeletal pain
Physiotherapy
Cohort study
Prognosis
author_facet Nils-Bo de Vos Andersen
Peter Kent
Jakob Hjort
David Høyrup Christiansen
author_sort Nils-Bo de Vos Andersen
title Clinical course and prognosis of musculoskeletal pain in patients referred for physiotherapy: does pain site matter?
title_short Clinical course and prognosis of musculoskeletal pain in patients referred for physiotherapy: does pain site matter?
title_full Clinical course and prognosis of musculoskeletal pain in patients referred for physiotherapy: does pain site matter?
title_fullStr Clinical course and prognosis of musculoskeletal pain in patients referred for physiotherapy: does pain site matter?
title_full_unstemmed Clinical course and prognosis of musculoskeletal pain in patients referred for physiotherapy: does pain site matter?
title_sort clinical course and prognosis of musculoskeletal pain in patients referred for physiotherapy: does pain site matter?
publisher BMC
series BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders
issn 1471-2474
publishDate 2017-03-01
description Abstract Background Danish patients with musculoskeletal disorders are commonly referred for primary care physiotherapy treatment but little is known about their general health status, pain diagnoses, clinical course and prognosis. The objectives of this study were to 1) describe the clinical course of patients with musculoskeletal disorders referred to physiotherapy, 2) identify predictors associated with a satisfactory outcome, and 3) determine the influence of the primary pain site diagnosis relative to those predictors. Methods This was a prospective cohort study of patients (n = 2,706) newly referred because of musculoskeletal pain to 30 physiotherapy practices from January 2012 to May 2012. Data were collected via a web-based questionnaire 1–2 days prior to the first physiotherapy consultation and at 6 weeks, 3 and 6 months, from clinical records (including primary musculoskeletal symptom diagnosis based on the ICPC-2 classification system), and from national registry data. The main outcome was the Patient Acceptable Symptom State. Potential predictors were analysed using backwards step-wise selection during longitudinal Generalised Estimating Equation regression modelling. To assess the influence of pain site on these associations, primary pain site diagnosis was added to the model. Results Of the patients included, 66% were female and the mean age was 48 (SD 15). The percentage of patients reporting their symptoms as acceptable was 32% at 6 weeks, 43% at 3 months and 52% at 6 months. A higher probability of satisfactory outcome was associated with place of residence, being retired, no compensation claim, less frequent pain, shorter duration of pain, lower levels of disability and fear avoidance, better mental health and being a non-smoker. Primary pain site diagnosis had little influence on these associations, and was not predictive of a satisfactory outcome. Conclusion Only half of the patients rated their symptoms as acceptable at 6 months. Although satisfactory outcome was difficult to predict at an individual patient level, there were a number of prognostic factors that were associated with this outcome. These factors should be considered when developing generic prediction tools to assess the probability of satisfactory outcome in musculoskeletal physiotherapy patients, because the site of pain did not affect that prognostic association.
topic Musculoskeletal pain
Physiotherapy
Cohort study
Prognosis
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12891-017-1487-3
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