1. A multicenter, observational study of pain and functional impairment in individuals with major depressive disorder in partial remission: the DESIRE study
- Author
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Adrián Pérez-Aranda, Raúl Martínez-Navarro, Francisco Javier Arranz-Estévez, Marc Iniesta-Terré, Matilde Elices, Francesc Colom, Alba Toll, Jesús Pujol, Laura Martínez-Sadurní, and Víctor Pérez
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Functional impairment ,Pain ,Depressive symptomatology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,mental disorders ,Outpatients ,Medicine ,Humans ,Generalizability theory ,In patient ,Depressive Disorder, Major ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,030227 psychiatry ,Causality ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Physical therapy ,Major depressive disorder ,Observational study ,Functional status ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background: The study explores the association between pain and functional impairment in patients with partially remitted MDD, considering both clinician and patient reported outcomes. Methods: Multicenter, observational, and cross-sectional study, with 583 outpatients with partially remitted MDD. Measures of pain intensity (VAS), functional impairment (SOFAS), depressive symptomatology (HAM-D6), and remission from MDD and functional status from a patient-centered perspective (RDQ) were collected. VAS scores (cut-off: 30) were used to divide the sample in two groups: no pain (n = 274) and pain (n = 309). Descriptive data, correlation and regression analyses were obtained. Results: Functional impairment (SOFAS) and pain (VAS) were negatively and significantly correlated in the total sample, and in the group with pain. Lower pain predicted higher functioning. The pain sub-sample was older, less educated, with higher medical comorbidities, higher HAM-D6 scores, and lower functionality (SOFAS). In the RDQ, the pain group showed significantly higher scores in the symptom-related subscales, and lower scores in the subscales related to positive mental health, functioning and wellbeing. Limitations: Correlational and observational design. The criteria and instruments used to measure pain and to define a threshold might limit the generalizability of findings. Conclusions: Pain and functionality should be assessed and treated in patients with MDD in partial remission. Our results indicate that functionality should be assessed with a broader perspective, that also considers positive mental health features.
- Published
- 2020