Current Issue - March/April - Vol 22 Issue 2

Abstract

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  1. 2019;22;E81-E90Development and Validation of a Screening Tool for Surgery-Specific Neuropathic Pain: Neuropathic Pain Scale for Postsurgical Patients
    Literature Review
    Kenneth Geving Andersen, MD, PhD, Karl Bang Christensen, PhD, and Mathias Kvist Mejdahl, MD.

BACKGROUND: Despite the existence of several screening tools for neuropathic pain, none of these are specific to surgery. We have developed a simple questionnaire tool, the Neuropathic Pain scale for Postsurgical patients (NeuPPS), to measure neuropathic pain in postsurgical patients.

OBJECTIVES: The aim was to validate this tool in a breast cancer population using an item response theory model, resulting in an easy-to-use scale.

STUDY DESIGN: Development was based on literature reviews and interviews with patients and experts and consisted of 6 items. It was tested among 2,217 long-term breast cancer survivors, and cross-validated in another data set of breast cancer survivors with 18 months follow-up.

SETTING: We tested the questionnaire tool among breast cancer survivors in 2 cohorts, one nationwide and one of consecutively treated patients at Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark.

METHODS: Items were assessed for criterion-related construct validity using the Rasch model, and for convergent validity by comparison to another neuropathic pain screening tool, the self-report version of the Leeds Assessment of Neuropathic Symptoms and Signs (S-LANSS) pain scale.

RESULTS: The selected 5-item model showed good fit, unidimensionality, monotonicity, and homogeneity. This result was reproducible in the cross-validation population. In a combined dataset with data from both studies, the model displayed a slightly lower fit, suggesting that items to some degree may vary over time. The Spearman rank correlation between the NeuPPS and S-LANSS was P = 0.57.

LIMITATIONS: We observed differential item functioning between the primary study population and the cross-validation population, meaning that some items behave differently at different follow-up times or study populations.

CONCLUSIONS: With the NeuPPS, we have validated a simple and easy-to-fill-out questionnaire tool for the measurement of neuropathic pain among postsurgical patients. The items are additive, giving a total score that measures neuropathic pain symptoms.

KEY WORDS: Scale validation, Rasch analysis, item response model, persistent postoperative pain, intercostobrachial nerve, neuropathy, neuropathic pain, quantitative sensory testing, breast cancer

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