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A cross-sectional study examining the psychometric properties of the painDETECT measure in neuropathic pain

BACKGROUND: Similarities and differences on the nine-item and seven-item versions of painDETECT, a patient-reported screener to identify neuropathic pain (NeP), have not been psychometrically explored across NeP conditions. METHODS: Scores on the nine-item painDETECT (seven pain symptom items, one p...

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Autores principales: Cappelleri, Joseph C, Koduru, Vijaya, Bienen, E Jay, Sadosky, Alesia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4403687/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25926754
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/JPR.S80046
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author Cappelleri, Joseph C
Koduru, Vijaya
Bienen, E Jay
Sadosky, Alesia
author_facet Cappelleri, Joseph C
Koduru, Vijaya
Bienen, E Jay
Sadosky, Alesia
author_sort Cappelleri, Joseph C
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Similarities and differences on the nine-item and seven-item versions of painDETECT, a patient-reported screener to identify neuropathic pain (NeP), have not been psychometrically explored across NeP conditions. METHODS: Scores on the nine-item painDETECT (seven pain symptom items, one pain course pattern item, one pain radiation item) range from −1 to 38; scores ≥19 indicate NeP is likely (>90% probability). The seven-item version (only pain symptoms) score range is 0 to 35. painDETECT was administered to subjects with confirmed diagnoses of human immunodeficiency virus-related peripheral NeP (HIVP) (n=103), spinal cord injury-related NeP (SCI) (n=103), small fiber neuropathy (n=100), painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy (n=112), posttrauma/postsurgical NeP (n=100), and NeP in chronic low back pain (n=106) identified during office visits to US community-based physicians. Analysis of covariance compared mean scores (adjusted for age, sex, race, ethnicity, time since NeP diagnosis, and number of comorbidities) on the nine-item and seven-item versions of painDETECT. Cronbach’s alpha assessed internal consistency reliability, and corrected item-to-total correlations assessed item-level discrimination. RESULTS: The adjusted mean nine-item scores ranged from 21.0 (SCI) to 24.3 (small fiber neuropathy). Differences between conditions were either trivial or small-to-medium in magnitude. Cronbach’s alpha gave overall internal consistency reliability of 0.76, with a range of 0.63 (SCI) to 0.82 (HIVP). Mean scores and Cronbach’s alphas for the seven-item version were generally similar to the nine-item version. Corrected item-to-total correlations adequately discriminated all pain symptom items on both painDETECT versions for each condition (0.3–0.7), but the two nonsensory items on the nine-item version showed lackluster discrimination (<0.3). CONCLUSION: painDETECT scores were within the range indicating high probability of NeP. Differences between conditions were generally modest or not large. Both versions showed evidence of internal consistency reliability and item-level discrimination, suggesting that painDETECT is a useful screening measure for identifying NeP across NeP conditions.
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spelling pubmed-44036872015-04-29 A cross-sectional study examining the psychometric properties of the painDETECT measure in neuropathic pain Cappelleri, Joseph C Koduru, Vijaya Bienen, E Jay Sadosky, Alesia J Pain Res Original Research BACKGROUND: Similarities and differences on the nine-item and seven-item versions of painDETECT, a patient-reported screener to identify neuropathic pain (NeP), have not been psychometrically explored across NeP conditions. METHODS: Scores on the nine-item painDETECT (seven pain symptom items, one pain course pattern item, one pain radiation item) range from −1 to 38; scores ≥19 indicate NeP is likely (>90% probability). The seven-item version (only pain symptoms) score range is 0 to 35. painDETECT was administered to subjects with confirmed diagnoses of human immunodeficiency virus-related peripheral NeP (HIVP) (n=103), spinal cord injury-related NeP (SCI) (n=103), small fiber neuropathy (n=100), painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy (n=112), posttrauma/postsurgical NeP (n=100), and NeP in chronic low back pain (n=106) identified during office visits to US community-based physicians. Analysis of covariance compared mean scores (adjusted for age, sex, race, ethnicity, time since NeP diagnosis, and number of comorbidities) on the nine-item and seven-item versions of painDETECT. Cronbach’s alpha assessed internal consistency reliability, and corrected item-to-total correlations assessed item-level discrimination. RESULTS: The adjusted mean nine-item scores ranged from 21.0 (SCI) to 24.3 (small fiber neuropathy). Differences between conditions were either trivial or small-to-medium in magnitude. Cronbach’s alpha gave overall internal consistency reliability of 0.76, with a range of 0.63 (SCI) to 0.82 (HIVP). Mean scores and Cronbach’s alphas for the seven-item version were generally similar to the nine-item version. Corrected item-to-total correlations adequately discriminated all pain symptom items on both painDETECT versions for each condition (0.3–0.7), but the two nonsensory items on the nine-item version showed lackluster discrimination (<0.3). CONCLUSION: painDETECT scores were within the range indicating high probability of NeP. Differences between conditions were generally modest or not large. Both versions showed evidence of internal consistency reliability and item-level discrimination, suggesting that painDETECT is a useful screening measure for identifying NeP across NeP conditions. Dove Medical Press 2015-04-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4403687/ /pubmed/25926754 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/JPR.S80046 Text en © 2015 Cappelleri et al. This work is published by Dove Medical Press Limited, and licensed under Creative Commons Attribution – Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License The full terms of the License are available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed.
spellingShingle Original Research
Cappelleri, Joseph C
Koduru, Vijaya
Bienen, E Jay
Sadosky, Alesia
A cross-sectional study examining the psychometric properties of the painDETECT measure in neuropathic pain
title A cross-sectional study examining the psychometric properties of the painDETECT measure in neuropathic pain
title_full A cross-sectional study examining the psychometric properties of the painDETECT measure in neuropathic pain
title_fullStr A cross-sectional study examining the psychometric properties of the painDETECT measure in neuropathic pain
title_full_unstemmed A cross-sectional study examining the psychometric properties of the painDETECT measure in neuropathic pain
title_short A cross-sectional study examining the psychometric properties of the painDETECT measure in neuropathic pain
title_sort cross-sectional study examining the psychometric properties of the paindetect measure in neuropathic pain
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4403687/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25926754
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/JPR.S80046
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