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Model Predicts Pain in Patients With Dementia


 

Many nursing home residents with dementia are at risk for undiagnosed, underestimated, and undermanaged pain because of their difficulty in communicating, but ongoing study suggests that objective assessment of a resident's health status can identify those with dementia who are in pain but can't report it themselves.

For the study, Christie Teigland, Ph.D., and her team at the New York Association of Homes & Services for the Aging first identified risk factors for pain in more than 500,000 cognitively intact residents of 670 nursing homes throughout New York state by applying logistic regression analysis to Medicare Minimum Data Set (MDS) data on these residents.

In keeping with a 2008 position statement by the American Society of Pain Management Nurses, the researchers assumed that the factors causing pain in these residents also would cause pain in dementia residents

The investigators found that being older and male decreased the likelihood that any person would report pain (odds ratios of 0.72–0.45, depending on the age group, and 0.67, respectively). Higher body mass index emerged as a risk factor for more pain (odds ratio of 1.09–1.29).

Many diseases, conditions, and treatments correlated directly or inversely with pain. For example, arthritis, hip fractures, and asthma were associated with increased likelihood of pain. Infections and skin conditions increased the risk for pain, whereas preventive skin treatments decreased risk. (See box, page 41)

The researchers used the data to apply a predictive risk model to pain reported by cognitively intact residents and estimate undetected or underreported pain in residents with dementia. Dr. Teigland found a difference of 16 percentage points between observed pain in the residents with dementia (19% of residents) and expected pain in that population (35% of residents). Because the researchers adjusted the model for diseases and conditions that can cause pain, the 84% difference indicates the underassessment of pain in residents whose dementia prevents full communication about their pain, Dr. Teigland asserted.

Overall, 42% of residents free of dementia had observed pain, compared with 19% of residents with dementia, a 23-point difference. When the researchers used their model to assess dementia patients' pain, the differences in expected pain rates between cognitively intact residents and dementia residents were much smaller, with rates of 45% versus 35% overall. Thus, after risk adjustment for conditions that cause pain, the expected rates of pain for dementia residents are 84% higher than rates actually reported.

This difference is further confounded by the finding that after risk adjustment, the older the resident, the lower the likelihood of reporting pain. There is disagreement in the literature about why this is the case.

Some studies suggest the threshold for and sensitivity to pain decreases with advancing age, so older residents experience less pain. Other studies state that pain is reported less with age because of attitudes (i.e., old people expect to have pain; or they are afraid of taking the medications).

If the latter is true, the difference between expected and reported pain is even higher than the risk adjusted data show because dementia residents tend to be older on average, said Dr. Teigland. “What is clear from this analysis is that pain is significantly underassessed in residents with dementia as compared to residents without dementia but with similar characteristics and risk factors for pain,” she said.

Dr. Teigland reported the findings at a conference on dementia sponsored by the Alzheimer's Association.

The new model isn't the only way to assess pain in nursing home residents, including those with dementia, she said. In those able to communicate their pain, self-reporting is the most reliable. Numeric rating scales, verbal descriptor scales, pain-thermometer scales, and faces scales can all be useful in assisting residents with self-reports, said Dr. Teigland. Assessments in those with dementia should include a review of potential causes of pain, observation for both verbal and nonverbal pain behaviors, and observation for behavior changes such as acting out or withdrawing. Surrogate reporting, done by nursing home staff, family members, and clergy, is also important, as are analgesic trials to test for response, she said. Pain detection has been shown to improve with the use of a combination of these tools in residents with dementia.

For the study, which was funded by the Alzheimer's Association, dementia residents were defined as those with a diagnosis of dementia or Alzheimer's disease or as those with a cognitive performance score (CPS) of 4–6, indicating moderately severe to very severe cognitive impairment. The CPS is a validated measure of cognitive status and was used because about 10% of nursing home residents with dementia do not have a diagnosis coded on the MDS. About 60% of nursing home residents in the study met these criteria.

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