Trajectory of Change in the Severity of Symptoms in Patients with Fibromyalgia over 24 Months: Exploratory Analyses of a Combination Pharmacological Intervention

Author:

Salaffi Fausto1,Lommano Maria Giovanna1,Bianchi Benedetta1,Farah Sonia1,Bandinelli Francesca2ORCID,Sarzi-Puttini Piercarlo3,Di Carlo Marco1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Rheumatology Unit, “Carlo Urbani” Hospital, Università Politecnica delle Marche, Jesi, 60035 Ancona, Italy

2. Rheumatology Department, San Giovanni di Dio Hospital, USL Tuscany Center, 50143 Florence, Italy

3. Rheumatology Unit, IRCCS Galeazzi-Sant’Ambrogio Hospital, ASST, School of Medicine, University of Milan, 20157 Milan, Italy

Abstract

Symptoms of fibromyalgia (FM) fluctuate and vary in severity. The current study aimed to evaluate the efficacy of palmitoylethanolamide (PEA) and acetyl-L-carnitine (ALC) in FM patients over a 24-month period and to investigate the mediating function of pain catastrophizing subdomains in unfavorable relationships with disease severity levels in patients with FM. Patients were evaluated at baseline, after 12 months, and after 24 months, using different patient-reported measures (FIQR, FASmod, PSD, and PCS) to distinguish different levels of FM disease severity. A reduction of 30% or more from baseline was considered clinically important (“markedly improved”). A multivariate analysis was performed to identify the variables predictive of an FIQR reduction. Twenty-two patients (28.6%) were classified as “markedly improved”, 16 patients (20.8%) as “slightly/moderately improved”, and 39 patients (50.6%) as “not improved.” The FIQR, FASmod, and PSD scores were significantly reduced at 24 months. The pain magnification domain score of the PCS was the only variable predictive of worse FIQR scores (Wald coefficient: −2.94; p = 0.047). These results suggest a potential long-term therapeutic role for the PEA + ALC combination, with pain magnification being the primary predictor of poor efficacy.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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