Affiliation:
1. Department of Anesthesiology Ruhr‐University Bochum, St. Josef‐ and St. Elisabeth‐Hospital Bochum Bochum Germany
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundThe Children's and Infant's Postoperative Pain Scale (CHIPPS) and the German version of the Parent's Postoperative Pain Measure (PPPM‐D) are used to assess postoperative pain intensity in preschool children. However, they have shown low concordance in previous prospective studies on quality improvement.AimsOur secondary analysis aimed to estimate the association strength between the pain score items and indication for rescue medication defined as CHIPPS ≥4 and/or PPPD‐D ≥ 6. Thus, we intended to create a further developed pain instrument with fewer variables for easier routine use.MethodsWe analyzed 1067 pain intensity assessments of hospitalized children for the development of our novel tool in two steps using modern statistical and machine‐learning methods: (1) Boruta variable selection to analyze the association strength between CHIPPS score, PPPM‐D items, age, weight, and elapsed time after surgery, including their interactions and pattern stability, and the binary outcome (analgesics required yes/no). (2) Symbolic regression to generate a short formula with the least number of variables and highest accuracy for rescue medication indication.ResultsAdditional analgesics were required in 19.96% of pain intensity assessments, whereby the PPPM‐D showed higher variance than CHIPPS. Boruta identified PPPM‐D score, CHIPPS score, 9 of the 15 PPPM‐D variables, and time of assessment as associated with the indication for RM. Symbolic regression revealed that additional analgesics are required if CHIPPS is ≥4 OR PPPM‐D item “less energy than usual” AND one of the items “more easily cry” or “more groan/moan” are answered with “yes.” These PPPM‐D items were not redundant and showed nonlinear course over time. The cross‐validated accuracy for this assessment tool was 94.94%.ConclusionsThe new instrument is easy to use and may improve postoperative pain intensity assessment in children. However, it requires prospective validation in a new cohort.
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health