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Published in: World Journal of Surgery 6/2021

01-06-2021 | Basic Surgery | Original Scientific Report

Pain Interference and Decreased Physical Function After Emergency General Surgery: Measuring Patient-Reported Outcomes

Authors: Justin S. Hatchimonji, Amanda L. Bader, Lucy W. Ma, Kristen Chreiman, James P. Byrne, Patrick M. Reilly, Benjamin M. Braslow, Mark J. Seamon, Daniel N. Holena

Published in: World Journal of Surgery | Issue 6/2021

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Abstract

Introduction

There is increasing emphasis on patient-reported outcomes (PROs) measures in healthcare, but this area remains largely unexplored in emergency general surgery (EGS) conditions. We hypothesized that postoperative patients in our EGS clinic would report detrimental changes in several domains of health-related quality of life (HRQoL).

Methods

We administered the PROMIS-29, a HRQoL measurement tool, to postoperative patients in our EGS clinic (11/2019–4/2020). Patients responded to measures of 7 domains. Domain scores were converted to t-scores, allowing comparison to average values within the general US population (set to 50 by definition). We report the mean scores within each domain. Higher scores in negatively worded domains (e.g., “Depression”) are worse; vice versa for positively worded domains (e.g., “Physical Function”). Changes in scores at subsequent clinic visits were analyzed using the paired t-test.

Results

There were 97 patients who completed the PROMIS-29 at the first postoperative visit. Mean (SD) age was 54.1 (16.2) years; 51% were male. There was no difference in our patients from the average US population in the domains of Ability to Participate in Social Roles and Activities, Anxiety, Fatigue, and Sleep Disturbance. However, EGS patients experienced significantly greater Pain Interference (56.1 [54.1, 58.1]) and worse Physical Function (40.6 [38.4, 42.7]) than average. For patients seen in follow-up twice (13 patients, median interval between clinic visits 21 days), there were improvements in the domains of Physical Function (42.9 vs 37.3; p = 0.04) and Fatigue.

Conclusion

We demonstrate room for improvement in the domains of pain interference and physical function. While positive changes over a relatively short period of time are encouraging, consideration should be given to patient perceptions of illness and lifestyle impact when managing EGS patients.
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Metadata
Title
Pain Interference and Decreased Physical Function After Emergency General Surgery: Measuring Patient-Reported Outcomes
Authors
Justin S. Hatchimonji
Amanda L. Bader
Lucy W. Ma
Kristen Chreiman
James P. Byrne
Patrick M. Reilly
Benjamin M. Braslow
Mark J. Seamon
Daniel N. Holena
Publication date
01-06-2021
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
World Journal of Surgery / Issue 6/2021
Print ISSN: 0364-2313
Electronic ISSN: 1432-2323
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00268-021-06011-9

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