Journal of Clinical Medicine (Jun 2020)

Predicting Pain Trajectories in the One Year Following Breast Cancer Diagnosis—An Observational Study

  • Marion Voute,
  • Véronique Morel,
  • Dominique Joly,
  • Christine Villatte,
  • Elodie Martin,
  • Xavier Durando,
  • Bruno Pereira,
  • Gisèle Pickering

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm9061907
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 6
p. 1907

Abstract

Read online

The impact of psychosocial vulnerability on pain in the year following breast cancer diagnosis has been little studied. To identify a score of psychosocial vulnerability (cognitive, emotional, quality of life and precariousness parameters) as a predictor of a pain trajectory, we conducted an observational prospective study and included women with newly diagnosed breast cancer. One year follow-up with 3 visits (day of breast cancer diagnosis; 6 and 12 months) aimed to identify distinct pain-time trajectories. Baseline psychosocial vulnerability was characterized by z-score transformation, a higher score representing a more vulnerable patient. A total of 89 patients were included (59.3 ± 10.7 years). Two trajectories of pain were identified—“Transient Pain trajectory” (TP) (39/89 patients) and “Persistent Pain trajectory” (PP) (50/89). A significant difference of pain over time between trajectories (PP vs. TP at 6 months: 2.23 ± 0.23 vs. 0.27 ± 0.09, p p p < 0.001). A predictive vulnerability marker of pain development is proposed and could be used at cancer diagnosis to orientate the care pathway of patients experiencing breast cancer.

Keywords