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An international study to explore the feasibility of collecting standardised outcome data for Complex Regional Pain Syndrome: Recommendations for an international clinical research registry

Grieve, Sharon; Brunner, Florian; Cabral, Danylo F; Connett, Robyn; Hirata, Hitoshi; Iwasaki, Norimasa; Nakagawa, Yasunobu; Sagir, Afrin; Sousa, Gudson; Vatine, Jean Jacques; Vaughan-Spickers, Nicole; Xu, Jijun; Buckle, Lisa; McCabe, Candida

An international study to explore the feasibility of collecting standardised outcome data for Complex Regional Pain Syndrome: Recommendations for an international clinical research registry Thumbnail


Authors

Florian Brunner

Danylo F Cabral

Robyn Connett

Hitoshi Hirata

Norimasa Iwasaki

Yasunobu Nakagawa

Afrin Sagir

Gudson Sousa

Jean Jacques Vatine

Nicole Vaughan-Spickers

Jijun Xu

Lisa Buckle

Candida McCabe



Abstract

Introduction: Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) is a persistent pain condition with low prevalence. Multi-centre collaborative research is needed to attain sufficient sample sizes for meaningful studies. This international observational study: (1) tested the feasibility and acceptability of collecting outcome data using an agreed core measurement set (2) tested and refined an electronic data management system to collect and manage the data. Methods: Adults with CRPS, meeting the Budapest diagnostic clinical criteria, were recruited to the study from 7 international research centres. After informed consent, a questionnaire comprising the core set outcome measures was completed: on paper at baseline (T1), and at 3 or 6 months (T2) using a paper or e-version. Participants and clinicians provided feedback on the data collection process. Clinicians completed the CRPS severity score at T1 and optionally, at T2. Ethical approval was obtained at each international centre. Results: Ninety-eight adults were recruited (female n=66; mean age 46.6 years, range 19-89), of whom 32% chose to receive the T2 questionnaire in an electronic format. Fifty-five participants completed both T1 and T2. Eighteen participants and nine clinicians provided feedback on their data collection experience. Conclusion: This study confirmed the questionnaire core outcome data are feasible and practicable to collect in clinical practice. The electronic data management system provided a robust means of collecting and managing the data across an international population. The findings have informed the final data collection tools and processes which will comprise the first international, clinical research registry and data bank for CRPS.

Citation

Grieve, S., Brunner, F., Cabral, D. F., Connett, R., Hirata, H., Iwasaki, N., …McCabe, C. (2023). An international study to explore the feasibility of collecting standardised outcome data for Complex Regional Pain Syndrome: Recommendations for an international clinical research registry. British Journal of Pain, 17(5), 468-478. https://doi.org/10.1177/20494637231188333

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jun 21, 2023
Online Publication Date Jul 10, 2023
Publication Date Oct 31, 2023
Deposit Date Nov 13, 2023
Publicly Available Date Nov 14, 2023
Journal British Journal of Pain
Print ISSN 2049-4637
Electronic ISSN 2049-4645
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 17
Issue 5
Pages 468-478
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/20494637231188333
Keywords core measurement set, international registry, feasibility study, Complex regional pain syndrome, pain measurement
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/11172754

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