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Defining Sickle Cell Disease Acute Painful Episodes: The Pisces Project
Background: For research purposes, painful crises in sickle cell disease (SCD) have either been self-defined by patients, or adjudicated by research experts, most often based on whether urgent care or hospital care was sought for pain related to SCD. The Pain in Sickle Cell Epidemiology Study (PiSCE...
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Published in: | Blood 2018-11, Vol.132 (Supplement 1), p.3510-3510 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Background: For research purposes, painful crises in sickle cell disease (SCD) have either been self-defined by patients, or adjudicated by research experts, most often based on whether urgent care or hospital care was sought for pain related to SCD. The Pain in Sickle Cell Epidemiology Study (PiSCES) determined that three-fourths of self-defined crises days were not managed in urgent or hospital care. The Analgesic, Anesthetic, and Addiction Clinical Trial Translations, Innovations, Opportunities, and Networks (AAPT) published a taxonomy of chronic SCD pain, defined as pain on most days of 6 months duration, along with at least one clinical sign, and no better explanation for the pain. We served on a similar SCD consensus panel to propose a more expansive taxonomy of acute sickle cell pain or painful episodes, informed by the PiSCES dataset (manuscript under review). Here we present three PiSCES-derived definitions of acute painful episodes, and we analyze the impact of various definitions on pain outcome results potentially useful for research.
Methods: PiSCES Patients (N=81) who completed at least 5 out of the expected 6 months of daily diaries and did not have gaps in their daily diary of 4 days or more were included. Patients self-reported their worst sickle cell pain intensity on a scale from 0 (none) to 9 (unbearable), and independently self-reported whether they were having a crisis that day, whether they went for an unscheduled physician visit, an Emergency Department visit, or whether they were hospitalized for sickle cell pain. Definitions of acute pain episodes compared here include self-reported crisis days, days with pain ≥ 5, and days with utilization of the ED or overnight hospitalization (other potential definitions not shown). To meet any definition, a crisis day (pain≥ 5, utilization) had to be reported for 2 or more consecutive days. Non-crisis intervals were 2 or more consecutive days without a self-reported crisis (pain ≥ 5, utilization). The average length of non-crisis intervals was considered to represent the time between crisis episodes. For |
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ISSN: | 0006-4971 1528-0020 |
DOI: | 10.1182/blood-2018-99-114830 |