Is the relationship between chronic pain and mortality causal? A propensity score analysis

Author:

Ryan Eva1,Grol-Prokopczyk Hanna2,Dennison Christopher R.2,Zajacova Anna3,Zimmer Zachary4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland

2. Department of Sociology, University at Buffalo, State University of New York, New York, NY, United States

3. Department of Sociology, University of Western Ontario, London, ON, Canada

4. Department of Family Studies and Gerontology and Global Aging and Community Initiative, Mount Saint Vincent University, Halifax, NS, Canada

Abstract

Abstract Chronic pain is a serious and prevalent condition that can affect many facets of life. However, uncertainty remains regarding the strength of the association between chronic pain and death and whether the association is causal. We investigate the pain–mortality relationship using data from 19,971 participants aged 51+ years in the 1998 wave of the U.S. Health and Retirement Study. Propensity score matching and inverse probability weighting are combined with Cox proportional hazards models to investigate whether exposure to chronic pain (moderate or severe) has a causal effect on mortality over a 20-year follow-up period. Hazard ratios (HRs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) are reported. Before adjusting for confounding, we find a strong association between chronic pain and mortality (HR: 1.32, 95% CI: 1.26-1.38). After adjusting for confounding by sociodemographic and health variables using a range of propensity score methods, the estimated increase in mortality hazard caused by pain is more modest (5%-9%) and the results are often also compatible with no causal effect (95% CIs for HRs narrowly contain 1.0). This attenuation highlights the role of confounders of the pain–mortality relationship as potentially modifiable upstream risk factors for mortality. Posing the depressive symptoms variable as a mediator rather than a confounder of the pain–mortality relationship resulted in stronger evidence of a modest causal effect of pain on mortality (eg, HR: 1.08, 95% CI: 1.01-1.15). Future work is required to model exposure–confounder feedback loops and investigate the potentially cumulative causal effect of chronic pain at multiple time points on mortality.

Funder

Science Foundation Ireland

National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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