Back to Search Start Over

Pain in adults with congenital heart disease : An international perspective

Authors :
Edward Callus
Stephen C. Cook
Sukyung Chung
Mikael Dellborg
Kamila S. White
Alexandra Soufi
Maayke A. Sluman
Koen Luyckx
Philip Moons
Samuel Menahem
Paul Khairy
Silke Apers
Shelby Kutty
Andrew S. Mackie
Katrine Eriksen
Allison Leibold
Erwin Oechslin
Shanthi Chidambarathanu
Jamie L. Jackson
Maryanne Caruana
Malin Berghammer
Gruschen R. Veldtman
Werner Budts
Adrienne H. Kovacs
Bengt Johansson
Corina Thomet
Junko Enomoto
Luis Alday
Susan M. Fernandes
Erin Eichler
Jou-Kou Wang
Source :
International Journal of Cardiology Congenital Heart Disease, Vol 5, Iss, Pp 100200-(2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Umeå universitet, Avdelningen för medicin, 2021.

Abstract

Background Patients with adult congenital heart disease (ACHD) have many risk factors for chronic pain such as prior cardiac interventions and adult comorbidities. However, the prevalence of chronic pain has not been well described in this population. We sought to determine the prevalence of pain in a large international cohort of patients with ACHD. Methods Data from the APPROACH-IS dataset was utilized for this study which includes 4028 patients with ACHD from 15 different countries. The prevalence of pain was assessed under the health status patient reported outcome domain utilizing the EuroQol-5D 3 level version tool. Multivariable logistic regression was used to assess differences across countries in pain, taking into account country-level random effects for clustering across observations within each country. Results A total of 3832 patients with ACHD met the study criteria, median age 32 years [IQR 25, 42], 52.6% females. The prevalence of at least moderate pain was reported by 28.9% (95% CO 27.5 ​= ​30.3%) of participants. Pain was associated with country of origin, age, gender, background, education and marital status as well as several clinical variables including disease complexity, cardiac device presence, history of heart failure, psychiatric conditions and presence of other medical conditions. Those with pain had lower levels of perceived health and a lower quality of life score. Conclusion Pain in patients with ACHD is common, impacting nearly one-third of patients. Given the far reaching implications of pain in patients with ACHD, further study of pain characteristics and treatment management appear warranted.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Cardiology Congenital Heart Disease, Vol 5, Iss, Pp 100200-(2021)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dc806b21116b870d5e8ca91aa45bb2ab