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Predicting Response to Pregabalin from Pretreatment Pain Quality: Clinical Applications of the Pain Quality Assessment Scale
Author(s) -
Gammaitoni Arnold R.,
Smugar Steven S.,
Jensen Mark P.,
Galer Bradley S.,
Bolognese James A.,
Alon Achilles,
Hewitt David J.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
pain medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.893
H-Index - 97
eISSN - 1526-4637
pISSN - 1526-2375
DOI - 10.1111/j.1526-4637.2012.01423.x
Subject(s) - pregabalin , medicine , placebo , logistic regression , neuropathic pain , physical therapy , post hoc analysis , visual analogue scale , clinical trial , anesthesia , alternative medicine , pathology
Objective.  The aim of this study is to assess the Pain Quality Assessment Scale (PQAS) in predicting pregabalin in peripheral neuropathic pain (NP). Study Design.  Post hoc analysis of a double‐blind, placebo‐controlled, enriched enrollment, randomized withdrawal trial evaluating pregabalin in 99 patients with NP who completed the PQAS, which comprises 20 questions regarding individual pain domains and qualities that are scored into three scales: paroxysmal, deep, and surface. Methods.  Patients rated the average pain intensity and pain quality using the PQAS at baseline; average pain intensity was assessed again after 40 days of treatment with pregabalin. Associations between pretreatment PQAS scores and treatment response were estimated using Pearson's r . Logistic regression was used to identify pretitration PQAS scores contributing unique variance to predicting treatment response. Results.  Fifty participants provided baseline PQAS scores and received pregabalin for the entire length of the study. Nine of 23 PQAS baseline scales and items were significantly associated with treatment response to pregabalin: the paroxysmal and deep scales, and the items assessing the following pain domains and qualities: intensity, electric, tingling, cramping, radiating, throbbing, and deep ( P values range, 0.002–0.045; r s range, 0.28–0.43). The PQAS items assessing sharp, hot, and unpleasant pain items demonstrated nonsignificant trends ( P  < 0.10) to be associated with treatment response. In the logistic regression analysis, pretitration PQAS scores had 77% sensitivity and 83% specificity to correctly identify pregabalin responders. Significantly correlated PQAS items had a sensitivity of 85% and specificity of 76%. Conclusion.  Pretitration PQAS scores reliably predicted pregabalin responders in patients with NP.

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