Trajectories and predictors of high-occurrence pain flares in ambulatory cancer patients on opioids

Author:

Meghani Salimah H123ORCID,Quinn Ryan1,Robinson Andrew1,Chittams Jesse1,Vapiwala Neha2,Naylor Mary13,Cheatle Martin4ORCID,Knafl George J5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biobehavioral Health Sciences; NewCourtland Center for Transitions and Health, University of Pennsylvania , Philadelphia, PA, USA

2. Abramson Cancer Center, University of Pennsylvania , Philadelphia, PA, USA

3. Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics, University of Pennsylvania , Philadelphia, PA, USA

4. Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania , Philadelphia, PA, USA

5. School of Nursing, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill , Chapel Hill, NC, USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Pain flares have a substantive impact on the quality of life and well-being of patients with cancer. We identified longitudinal trajectories (clusters) of cancer pain flares in ambulatory patients and sociodemographic and clinical predictors of these trajectories. Methods In a prospective cohort study using ecological momentary assessment (mEMA), we collected patient-reported daily pain flare ratings data over 5 months and identified predictors and correlates using validated measures. Results The mean age of the sample (N = 270) was 60.9 years (SD = 11.2), 64.8% were female, and 32.6% self-identified as African American. Four pain flare clusters were identified. The “high-occurrence” cluster (23% of patients) experienced 5.5 (SD = 5.47) daily flares, whereas low-moderate clusters (77%) reported 2.4 (SD = 2.74) daily flares (P < .000). Those in the high-occurrence cluster reported higher pain scores (P = .000), increased pain-related interference (P = .000), depressive symptoms (P = .023), lower quality of life (P = .001), and reduced pain self-efficacy (P = .006). Notably, 67.2% of those prescribed opioids as needed (PRN only) were in the high-occurrence pain flare cluster, compared with 27.9% with PRN and around-the-clock opioid prescriptions (P = .024). Individual predictors of high-occurrence pain flares were income below $30 000, unemployment, being African American, lower education level, Medicaid insurance, current opioid misuse (COMM), baseline inpatient hospital stay duration, and PRN-only opioid regimen. In the multiple predictor model, lower education level, unemployment, COMM score, extended inpatient duration, and PRN-only opioid regimen remained significant. Conclusion In ambulatory patients with cancer, high occurrence of pain flares may be mitigated by attention to opioid prescription factors and addressing social determinants of health needs of underserved patients.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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