Mechanisms of education and graded sensorimotor retraining in people with chronic low back pain: a mediation analysis

Files

Date

2023

Authors

Cashin, A.G.
Lee, H.
Wand, B.M.
Bagg, M.K.
O'Hagan, E.T.
Rizzo, R.R.N.
Stanton, T.R.
Moseley, G.L.
McAuley, J.H.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Pain, 2023; 164(12):2792-2800

Statement of Responsibility

Conference Name

Abstract

An improved understanding of the biopsychosocial influences that contribute to and maintain pain has promoted the development of new efficacious treatments for chronic low back pain (CLBP). This study aimed to investigate the mechanisms of a new treatment - education and graded sensorimotor retraining - on pain and disability. We conducted a preplanned causal mediation analysis of a randomized clinical trial which allocated 276 participants with CLBP to 12 weekly clinical sessions of education and graded sensorimotor retraining (n = 138) or a sham and attention control (n = 138). Outcomes were pain intensity and disability, both assessed at 18 weeks. Hypothesized mediators included tactile acuity, motor coordination, back self-perception, beliefs about the consequences of back pain, kinesiophobia, pain self-efficacy, and pain catastrophizing, all assessed at the end of treatment (12 weeks). Four of 7 mechanisms (57%) mediated the intervention effect on pain; the largest mediated effects were for beliefs about back pain consequences (-0.96 [-1.47 to -0.64]), pain catastrophizing (-0.49 [-0.61 to -0.24]), and pain self-efficacy (-0.37 [-0.66 to -0.22]). Five of 7 mechanisms (71%) mediated the intervention effect on disability; the largest mediated effects were for beliefs about back pain consequences (-1.66 [-2.62 to -0.87]), pain catastrophizing (-1.06 [-1.79 to -0.53]), and pain self-efficacy (-0.84 [-1.89 to -0.45]). When all 7 mechanisms were considered simultaneously, the joint mediation effect explained most of the intervention effect for both pain and disability. Optimizing interventions to target beliefs about the consequences of back pain, pain catastrophizing, and pain self-efficacy is likely to lead to improved outcomes for people with CLBP.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Data source: Supplemental digital content, http://links.lww.com/PAIN/B870

Access Status

Rights

Copyright 2023 International Association for the Study of Pain Access Condition Notes: Accepted manuscript available after 01 January 2025

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record