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Risk factors for persistent post surgical pain (PPSP): a systematic review and meta-analysis

Persistent postsurgical pain (PPSP) is reported as recurrent and frequently disabling complication of many surgical procedures. The consequences for PPSP not only reduce the quality of life for patients but also financially tax the health care system, considering the volume of surgical procedures performed annually. Development of chronic pain has been proposed to involve a complex pathophysiology combined with pre-, intra-, and post-operative risk factors. There is no definite recommendation on which factor to assess (in which surgery) and what tools to utilize for conducting a study on PPSP, since many recognized risk factors for PPSP are contradictory. For a comprehensive overview of major PPSP risk factors for identification and possible prevention, we conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of the published literature on the risk factors across six major surgical groups: breast surgery, chest/thoracic surgery, total hip arthroplasty/total knee arthroplasty (THA/TKA), gynecologic surgery, iliac crest bone harvest (ICBH), and groin hernia repair. Furthermore, to assess the generalizability of the meta-analysis results, we sought to conduct a retrospective, cross-sectional study examining the prevalence and major risk factors of PPSP after cystectomy for bladder cancer. The meta-analysis found that no single risk factor was associated with PPSP across all surgical groups. Age and previous surgery were found to be risk factors for PPSP in gynecologic surgery. For thoracic surgery, male sex and BMI were found as risk factors for PPSP. Surgical duration, presurgical chronic pain, and BMI were risk factors for groin hernia repair. The prevalence of PPSP in our cystectomy study was 22.1%. Female sex and presurgical chronic pain were risk factors significantly associated with PPSP after cystectomy. No risk factors were universally associated with PPSP. Persistent pain after each type of surgical procedure appear to have separate set risk factors among age, BMI, sex, previous surgery, and presurgical pain.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bu.edu/oai:open.bu.edu:2144/16823
Date18 June 2016
CreatorsPatel, Premal P.
Source SetsBoston University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation

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