Pain, function, and acute neuropathic pain up to one month after surgery: a registry-based analysis
Ana Lilia Garduño-López, Philipp Baumbach, Victor Manuel Acosta-Nava, Frida Fernanda Verdugo-Velázquez, Gabriela Josefina Vidaña-Martínez, Eldeli Molina-Niño, Luis Felipe Cuellar-Gúzman, Belén Aurora García-Herrera, Dulce María Rascón-Martínez, Gabriela Islas-Lagunas, Juan de la Cruz Pineda-Pérez, J. Jesús Cano-García, Mariana Calderon-Vidal, Jorge Jimenez-Tornero, Oscar López-Hernández, Elizabeth Villegas-Sotelo, Monica Dominguez-Cid, Maria Esther Flores-Villanueva, Winfried Meissner, Marcus Komann, Christin Arnold, Claudia Weinmann, Ulrike M. Stamer, Ruth ZaslanskyIntroduction:
Knowledge of how patients experience pain and patterns of resolution beyond the first days after surgery is limited. Acute neuropathic pain (ANeuP) following surgery is rarely assessed.
Objectives:
We aimed to characterize pain intensity, pain-related functional impairment, ANeuP, and to describe patterns of resolution in a large cohort undergoing diverse surgical procedures up to 1 month postoperatively, the subacute period.
Methods:
This was an observational, multicentre study. Outcomes were assessed on postoperative days (PODs) 1/7/30 using the PAIN OUT registry methodology. The primary endpoint was the change in pain-related interference between POD7 and POD30. Patient subgroups were identified using cluster analysis.
Results:
A cohort of 1,153 patients (median age 49; 67% female) was enrolled. By POD30, pain-related functional interference decreased (
Conclusion:
Although the majority of patients in the cohort largely recovered in terms of pain and interference by POD30, 16% belonged to the Minimal-pain resolution cluster. These patients may benefit from proactive identification and management by anaesthetists, surgeons, and practitioners in the community before surgery or in the early weeks after surgery.