News

Stepped-care intervention beats usual care in veterans with chronic pain


 

FROM JAMA INTERNAL MEDICINE

References

A stepped-care intervention balancing pain relief, self-management strategies, and cognitive-behavioral therapy achieves significant improvements in chronic pain compared with usual care by pharmacological and nonpharmacological means, according to a paper published in JAMA Internal Medicine.

A randomized, controlled trial of 241 veterans with chronic and disabling musculoskeletal pain found that veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts treated with the stepped intervention experienced a more than twofold greater reduction in Roland Morris Disability Scale and Graded Chronic Pain Scale severity scores, compared to those in the control arm (–3.7 vs. –1.7, P = .002, and –11.1 vs. –4.5, P = .001) at 9 months after randomization.

The intervention involved 12 weeks of optimized analgesic therapy combined with the teaching of pain self-management strategies, followed by an additional 12 weeks including adapted cognitive-behavioral therapy (JAMA Intern. Med. 2015 March 9 [doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2015.97]).

“The patients spoke about their evolving understanding of their pain experience during the trial and how this new understanding helped them manage their pain more effectively,” wrote Dr. Matthew J. Bair of the Richard L. Roudebush Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Indianapolis, and his associates.

Among the limitations cited by Dr. Bair is that the participants were recent veterans with chronic musculoskeletal pain, so the results might not be generalizable to veterans from earlier wars or to nonveterans.

The study was supported by Veterans Affairs Rehabilitation Research and Development, and one author reported unrelated honoraria from Eli Lilly.

Recommended Reading

Adults with eczema face increased risk of fracture and bone or joint injuries
MDedge Rheumatology
NIH report on long-term opioid treatment cites lack of data, research needs
MDedge Rheumatology
CDC: Opioid use high among reproductive age women
MDedge Rheumatology
Opioid abuse major concern for primary care physicians
MDedge Rheumatology
Abuse-deterrent formulation of extended-release hydrocodone approved
MDedge Rheumatology
New fatigue diagnosis is a valid disease
MDedge Rheumatology
How to halt ‘a heart attack of the finger’
MDedge Rheumatology
VIDEO: Ask patients about metal-on-metal hip implants
MDedge Rheumatology
VIDEO: Homeopathic injectables topped placebo for knee osteoarthritis
MDedge Rheumatology
Newly isolated spider venom compounds could relieve chronic pain
MDedge Rheumatology