• Eur J Pain · Jan 2017

    Establishment of cutpoints to categorize the severity of chronic pain using composite ratings with Rasch analysis.

    • C-W Chien, K S Bagraith, A Khan, M Deen, J-J Syu, and J Strong.
    • Occupational Therapy Division, School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
    • Eur J Pain. 2017 Jan 1; 21 (1): 82-91.

    BackgroundEstablishment of cutpoints for classifying mild, moderate and severe pain is commonly based on single rating of worst or average pain. However, single pain measure may serve as a brief and partial surrogate for composite pain ratings. This study aimed to base composite pain ratings to establish optimal cutpoint that maximized the difference of pain interference on daily function and compare its utility with those based on single worst and average pain.MethodsData were from a cohort study of 322 patients with chronic pain. Brief pain inventory (including four items measuring the least, worst, average and current pain) was administered. Rasch analysis and Serlin et al.'s (Pain, 61, 1995, 277) method were used to derive optimal cutpoint.ResultsRasch analysis calibrated the least, worst, average and current pain items into a unidimensional hierarchy and produced composite pain measurement. The optimal cutpoint for composite pain (mild, ≤4; moderate, >4-6; severe, >6-10 on the 0-10 numeric rating scale) differed from those cutpoints for worst (≤6; >6-8; >8-10) and average pain (≤5; >5-7; >7-10). The optimal cutpoint for composite pain was better able than those for worst and average pain to distinguish among groups on patient-rated pain quality and quality of life. The optimal cutpoint for average pain had better discriminant ability than that for worst pain.ConclusionThe results suggest that using optimal cutpoint for composite pain may be useful to classify clinically important groups in patients with chronic pain and that average pain may be an alternative choice if a single item is used. WHAT DOES THIS STUDY ADD?: Using composite pain, optimal classification for mild, moderate and severe pain exhibited better discriminant ability than using single worst/average pain. The difficulty hierarchy of the least, worst, average and current pain helps to screen people with irregular responses.© 2016 European Pain Federation - EFIC®.

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