
Can Quantitative Sensory Testing Move Us Closer to Mechanism‐Based Pain Management?
Author(s) -
CruzAlmeida Yenisel,
Fillingim Roger B.
Publication year - 2014
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/pme.12230
Subject(s) - quantitative sensory testing , mechanism (biology) , sensory system , pain management , medicine , sensory analysis , physical medicine and rehabilitation , physical therapy , psychology , neuroscience , epistemology , biology , philosophy , food science
Objective This review summarizes the scientific literature relating to the use of quantitative sensory testing ( QST ) for mechanism‐based pain management. Design A literature search was undertaken using P ub M ed and search terms including quantitative sensory testing, pain, chronic pain, response to treatment, outcome measure. Settings and Patients Studies including QST in healthy individuals and those with painful disorders were reviewed. Measures Publications reported on QST methodological issues including associations among measures and reliability. We also included publications on the use of QST measures in case‐control studies, their associations with biopsychosocial mechanisms, QST measures predicting clinical pain, as well as predicting and reflecting treatment responses. Results Although evidence suggests that QST may be useful in a mechanism‐based classification of pain, there are gaps in our current understanding that need to be addressed including making QST more applicable in clinical settings. There is a need for developing shorter QST protocols that are clinically predictive of various pain subtypes and treatment responses without requiring expensive equipment. Future studies are needed, examining the clinical predictive value of QST including sensitivity and specificity for pain classification or outcome prediction. These findings could enable third‐party payers' reimbursement, which would facilitate clinical implementation of QST . Conclusions With some developments, QST could become a cost‐effective and clinically useful component of pain assessment and diagnosis, which can further our progress toward the goal of mechanism‐based personalized pain management.