Chronic pain interference assessment tools for children and adults who are unable to self‐report: A systematic review of psychometric properties

Author:

Smith Meredith G.1ORCID,Farrar Lucy C.1ORCID,Gibson Rachel J.1ORCID,Russo Remo N.23ORCID,Harvey Adrienne R.45ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Allied Health Science and Practice University of Adelaide Adelaide Australia

2. College of Medicine and Public Health Flinders University Adelaide Australia

3. Paediatric Rehabilitation Department Women's and Children's Hospital Adelaide Australia

4. Neurodisability and Rehabilitation Murdoch Children's Research Institute Melbourne Australia

5. Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences University of Melbourne Melbourne Australia

Abstract

AbstractAimTo identify and evaluate psychometric properties of assessment tools for assessing pain interference in children, adolescents, and adults with chronic pain and the inability to self‐report.MethodThe protocol was registered with PROSPERO (CRD42022310102). A search was run in MEDLINE, Embase, and PsycInfo (29th March 2022) to identify articles reporting psychometric properties of pain interference assessment tools for children, adolescents, and adults with chronic pain and the inability to objectively self‐report pain. Retrieved studies were reviewed by two authors (MGS, LCF) and study quality was assessed using COSMIN.ResultsPsychometric properties of 10 pain interference tools were assessed from 33 studies. The Paediatric Pain Profile (PPP) had low‐quality evidence for content validity and internal consistency with children and adolescents who are unable to self‐report. No tools for adults had evidence for content validity and internal consistency. No tool had evidence for all nine psychometric properties.InterpretationThe PPP is recommended for pain interference assessment in children and adolescents with chronic pain and the inability to self‐report. Few tools are available for adults. Three tools for children (Patient‐Reported Outcome Measurement Information System Pediatric Proxy Pain Interference Scale; Bath Adolescent Pain Questionnaire for Parents; modified Brief Pain Inventory‐Proxy [mBPI]) and three tools for adults (Doloplus‐2; Patient‐Reported Outcome Measurement Information System Pain Interference Scale‐proxy; Brief Pain Inventory‐proxy) are promising but require further investigation.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Developmental Neuroscience,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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