Intraindividual pain variability metrics for youth with sickle cell disease: Relations to health outcomes

Author:

Pascale Angela1ORCID,Sisler India2ORCID,Smith Wally3,Valrie Cecelia1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology Virginia Commonwealth University Richmond Virginia USA

2. Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology Children's Hospital of Richmond at Virginia Commonwealth University Richmond Virginia USA

3. Department of Internal Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine Commonwealth University Richmond Virginia USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundWhile the majority of pediatric sickle cell disease (SCD) research has used mean pain intensity as the only pain metric, recent evidence suggests this metric alone is inadequate in describing the intraindividual variability in SCD pain experiences and subsequent impact. There is limited information on other intraindividual pain metrics in youth with SCD, or how they relate to health outcomes in this population. The aims of this study were to describe differing patterns of intraindividual pain metrics derived from ecological momentary assessments (EMAs) of youth with SCD and to characterize the unique relationships between these metrics and health outcomes.MethodsEighty‐eight youth with SCD, aged 8–17 (mean age = 11.6), were recruited from three regional pediatric SCD clinics in the United States. At baseline, youth and their guardians reported on demographic and disease information. Then youth completed twice daily EMAs for up to 4 weeks. Pain metrics derived from EMA data were calculated including mean daily pain intensity (DP), SD‐DP (standard deviation of DP), proportion of pain days (PPD), and 90th percentile of DP (p90). Pearson correlations were calculated between pain metrics and health outcomes.ResultsHigh DP and SD‐DP were correlated with more anxiety symptoms, while high SD‐DP and p90 were correlated with more depression symptoms. High SD‐DP was correlated with low self‐esteem, and high DP and PPD were correlated with low sickle cell self‐efficacy. For healthcare utilization due to pain, high p90 was correlated with more emergency department visits, while high DP, p90, and PPD were correlated with more healthcare contacts.ConclusionThere are distinct associations between pain variability metrics beyond DP and health outcomes. Collectively, the patterns of associations suggest the utility of these pain metrics for determining risk in relation to specific health outcomes for youth with SCD.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Oncology,Hematology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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