PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

The association between baseline persistent pain and weight change in patients attending a specialist weight management service.

  • Cormac G Ryan,
  • Arutchelvam Vijayaraman,
  • Victoria Denny,
  • Alison Ogier,
  • Louisa Ells,
  • Shaun Wellburn,
  • Lesley Cooper,
  • Denis J Martin,
  • Greg Atkinson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0179227
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 6
p. e0179227

Abstract

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To quantify the influence of baseline pain levels on weight change at one-year follow-up in patients attending a National Health Service specialist weight management programme.We compared one-year follow-up weight (body mass) change between patient sub-groups of none-to-mild, moderate, and severe pain at baseline. A mean sub-group difference in weight change of ≥5kg was considered clinically relevant.Of the 141 complete cases, n = 43 (30.5%) reported none-to-mild pain, n = 44 (31.2%) reported moderate pain, and n = 54 (38.3%) reported severe pain. Covariate-adjusted mean weight loss (95%CI) was similar for those with none-to-mild (8.1kg (4.2 to 12.0kg)) and moderate pain (8.3kg (4.9 to 11.7kg). The mean weight loss of 3.0kg (-0.4 to 6.4kg) for the severe pain group was 5.1kg (-0.6 to 10.7, p = 0.08) lower than the none-to-mild pain group and 5.3kg (0.4 to 10.2kg, p = 0.03) lower than the moderate pain group.Patients with severe pain upon entry to a specialist weight management service in England achieve a smaller mean weight loss at one-year follow-up than those with none-to-moderate pain. The magnitude of the difference in mean weight loss was clinically relevant, highlighting the importance of addressing severe persistent pain in obese patients undertaking weight management programmes.