Psychological Evaluation of Patients With Cancer Presenting to the Emergency Department With Pain: Independent Predictors of Worse Pain Severity, Interference, and Higher Hourly Opioid Administration

Author:

Azizoddin Desiree R.123ORCID,Beck Meghan1,Flowers K. Mikayla4ORCID,Wilson Jenna M.4ORCID,Chai Peter1356,Johnsky Lily1,Cremone Gabrielle7,Edwards Robert4,Hasdianda Adriana1ORCID,Boyer Edward1ORCID,Schreiber Kristin L.4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Emergency Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA

2. Health Promotion Research Center, Stephenson Cancer Center, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK

3. Department of Psychosocial Oncology and Palliative Care, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA

4. Department of Anesthesiology Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA

5. The Koch Institute for Integrated Cancer Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA

6. The Fenway Institute, Boston, MA

7. Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, MA

Abstract

PURPOSE: Pain is a common complaint in patients with cancer presenting to the emergency department (ED). This prospective study evaluated whether biopsychosocial factors could help predict cancer patients with risk of higher pain severity, pain interference, and opioid consumption. METHODS: Patients with cancer presenting to the ED with a complaint of moderate-severe pain (≥ 4/10-numeric rating scale) completed validated self-report measures assessing sociodemographics, cancer-related treatments, pain severity and interference, medication use, and psychological symptoms (depression, anxiety, pain catastrophizing, and sleep disturbance). Opioids administered and subsequent hospitalization were abstracted. Univariable and multivariable regression analyses assessed factors associated with pain-related outcomes. RESULTS: Participants (n = 175) presented with a variety of cancer types, with 76% having metastatic disease and 42% reporting current outpatient opioid use. Higher pain catastrophizing, lower depressive symptoms, lower income, outpatient opioid use, and historical chronic pain were independently associated with worse pain ( P ≤ .05). Higher pain catastrophizing, anxiety, sleep disturbance, outpatient opioid use, and education were independently associated with worse pain interference ( P ≤ .05). The sole independent predictor of ED opioid administration was outpatient opioid use. Patients taking outpatient opioids were younger, had lower health literacy, worse pain catastrophizing, sleep disturbance, depression/anxiety, and greater rates of metastatic cancer and cancer-related surgery ( P ≤ .05). CONCLUSION: Biopsychosocial factors, particularly pain catastrophizing, remained significantly associated with worse pain outcomes for patients with cancer in the ED even after controlling for demographic and clinical variables. Patient outpatient opioid use was independently associated with worse pain, interference, and greater opioid administration, identifying this as a marker for who may benefit most from adjuvant pharmacologic and behavioral interventions.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Oncology (nursing),Health Policy,Oncology

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