A protocol for chronic pain outcome measurement enhancement by linking PROMIS-29 scale to legacy measures and improving chronic pain stratification

Abstract Background Substantial investment has gone into research on the efficacy and effectiveness of pharmaceutical and nonpharmacologic interventions for chronic pain. However, synthesizing this extensive literature is challenging because of differences in the outcome measures used in studies of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Patricia M. Herman, Maria O. Edelen, Anthony Rodriguez, Lara G. Hilton, Ron D. Hays
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-10-01
Series:BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12891-020-03696-2
id doaj-ab3e57aee3334b4b8e8f3d2935f0294c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ab3e57aee3334b4b8e8f3d2935f0294c2020-11-25T03:36:39ZengBMCBMC Musculoskeletal Disorders1471-24742020-10-0121111110.1186/s12891-020-03696-2A protocol for chronic pain outcome measurement enhancement by linking PROMIS-29 scale to legacy measures and improving chronic pain stratificationPatricia M. Herman0Maria O. Edelen1Anthony Rodriguez2Lara G. Hilton3Ron D. Hays4RAND CorporationRAND CorporationRAND CorporationGovernment & Public Services, Deloitte Consulting, LLPRAND CorporationAbstract Background Substantial investment has gone into research on the efficacy and effectiveness of pharmaceutical and nonpharmacologic interventions for chronic pain. However, synthesizing this extensive literature is challenging because of differences in the outcome measures used in studies of similar or competing interventions. The absence of a common metric makes it difficult to replicate findings, pool data from multiple studies, resolve conflicting conclusions, or reach consensus when interpreting findings. Methods This study has a seven-member Advisory Council of chronic pain experts. Preliminary analyses will be performed on data from several large existing datasets; intermediate analyses will be performed using primary data collected from Amazon’s Mechanical Turk (MTurk); and cross-validation will use primary data collected from a nationally-representative, probability-based panel. Target sample size for both primary datasets is 1500. The three study aims are as follows: Aim 1 will develop and evaluate links between the 29-item Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS®-29) and legacy measures used for chronic pain such as the Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire (RMDQ) and the Oswestry Disability Index (ODI). We will assess the best method of score linking and create crosswalk tables. Aim 2 will evaluate and refine the Impact Stratification Score (ISS) based on 9 PROMIS-29 items and proposed by the NIH Research Task Force on chronic low back pain. We will evaluate the ISS in terms of other indicators of condition severity and patient prognosis and outcomes and identify cut-points to stratify chronic pain patients into subgroups. Aim 3 will evaluate the strengths and limitations of MTurk as a data collection platform for estimating chronic pain by comparing its data to other data sources. Discussion The accomplishment of Aims 1 and 2 will allow direct comparison of results across past and future studies of chronic pain. These comparisons will help us to understand different results from seemingly similar studies, and to determine the relative effectiveness of all pharmaceutical and nonpharmacologic interventions for chronic pain across different trials. Aim 3 findings will provide valuable information to researchers about the pros and cons of using the MTurk platform for research-based data collection. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT04426812 ; June 10, 2020.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12891-020-03696-2Chronic painChronic low back painPROMIS-29Oswestry disability indexRoland-Morris disability questionnaireHigh-impact chronic pain
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patricia M. Herman
Maria O. Edelen
Anthony Rodriguez
Lara G. Hilton
Ron D. Hays
spellingShingle Patricia M. Herman
Maria O. Edelen
Anthony Rodriguez
Lara G. Hilton
Ron D. Hays
A protocol for chronic pain outcome measurement enhancement by linking PROMIS-29 scale to legacy measures and improving chronic pain stratification
BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders
Chronic pain
Chronic low back pain
PROMIS-29
Oswestry disability index
Roland-Morris disability questionnaire
High-impact chronic pain
author_facet Patricia M. Herman
Maria O. Edelen
Anthony Rodriguez
Lara G. Hilton
Ron D. Hays
author_sort Patricia M. Herman
title A protocol for chronic pain outcome measurement enhancement by linking PROMIS-29 scale to legacy measures and improving chronic pain stratification
title_short A protocol for chronic pain outcome measurement enhancement by linking PROMIS-29 scale to legacy measures and improving chronic pain stratification
title_full A protocol for chronic pain outcome measurement enhancement by linking PROMIS-29 scale to legacy measures and improving chronic pain stratification
title_fullStr A protocol for chronic pain outcome measurement enhancement by linking PROMIS-29 scale to legacy measures and improving chronic pain stratification
title_full_unstemmed A protocol for chronic pain outcome measurement enhancement by linking PROMIS-29 scale to legacy measures and improving chronic pain stratification
title_sort protocol for chronic pain outcome measurement enhancement by linking promis-29 scale to legacy measures and improving chronic pain stratification
publisher BMC
series BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders
issn 1471-2474
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Abstract Background Substantial investment has gone into research on the efficacy and effectiveness of pharmaceutical and nonpharmacologic interventions for chronic pain. However, synthesizing this extensive literature is challenging because of differences in the outcome measures used in studies of similar or competing interventions. The absence of a common metric makes it difficult to replicate findings, pool data from multiple studies, resolve conflicting conclusions, or reach consensus when interpreting findings. Methods This study has a seven-member Advisory Council of chronic pain experts. Preliminary analyses will be performed on data from several large existing datasets; intermediate analyses will be performed using primary data collected from Amazon’s Mechanical Turk (MTurk); and cross-validation will use primary data collected from a nationally-representative, probability-based panel. Target sample size for both primary datasets is 1500. The three study aims are as follows: Aim 1 will develop and evaluate links between the 29-item Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS®-29) and legacy measures used for chronic pain such as the Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire (RMDQ) and the Oswestry Disability Index (ODI). We will assess the best method of score linking and create crosswalk tables. Aim 2 will evaluate and refine the Impact Stratification Score (ISS) based on 9 PROMIS-29 items and proposed by the NIH Research Task Force on chronic low back pain. We will evaluate the ISS in terms of other indicators of condition severity and patient prognosis and outcomes and identify cut-points to stratify chronic pain patients into subgroups. Aim 3 will evaluate the strengths and limitations of MTurk as a data collection platform for estimating chronic pain by comparing its data to other data sources. Discussion The accomplishment of Aims 1 and 2 will allow direct comparison of results across past and future studies of chronic pain. These comparisons will help us to understand different results from seemingly similar studies, and to determine the relative effectiveness of all pharmaceutical and nonpharmacologic interventions for chronic pain across different trials. Aim 3 findings will provide valuable information to researchers about the pros and cons of using the MTurk platform for research-based data collection. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT04426812 ; June 10, 2020.
topic Chronic pain
Chronic low back pain
PROMIS-29
Oswestry disability index
Roland-Morris disability questionnaire
High-impact chronic pain
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12891-020-03696-2
work_keys_str_mv AT patriciamherman aprotocolforchronicpainoutcomemeasurementenhancementbylinkingpromis29scaletolegacymeasuresandimprovingchronicpainstratification
AT mariaoedelen aprotocolforchronicpainoutcomemeasurementenhancementbylinkingpromis29scaletolegacymeasuresandimprovingchronicpainstratification
AT anthonyrodriguez aprotocolforchronicpainoutcomemeasurementenhancementbylinkingpromis29scaletolegacymeasuresandimprovingchronicpainstratification
AT laraghilton aprotocolforchronicpainoutcomemeasurementenhancementbylinkingpromis29scaletolegacymeasuresandimprovingchronicpainstratification
AT rondhays aprotocolforchronicpainoutcomemeasurementenhancementbylinkingpromis29scaletolegacymeasuresandimprovingchronicpainstratification
AT patriciamherman protocolforchronicpainoutcomemeasurementenhancementbylinkingpromis29scaletolegacymeasuresandimprovingchronicpainstratification
AT mariaoedelen protocolforchronicpainoutcomemeasurementenhancementbylinkingpromis29scaletolegacymeasuresandimprovingchronicpainstratification
AT anthonyrodriguez protocolforchronicpainoutcomemeasurementenhancementbylinkingpromis29scaletolegacymeasuresandimprovingchronicpainstratification
AT laraghilton protocolforchronicpainoutcomemeasurementenhancementbylinkingpromis29scaletolegacymeasuresandimprovingchronicpainstratification
AT rondhays protocolforchronicpainoutcomemeasurementenhancementbylinkingpromis29scaletolegacymeasuresandimprovingchronicpainstratification
_version_ 1724548904241856512