尿代谢物作为现役军人慢性疼痛和相关症状的指标

IF 2.2 4区 医学 Q1 NURSING
Dahee Wi, Hannah Choi, Nathan Tintle, Nicholas Ieronimakis, Diane M Flynn, Jeffrey C Ransom, Kira P Orr, Honor M McQuinn, Tyler J Snow, Ardith Z Doorenbos
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:背景:慢性疼痛是痛苦和残疾的主要原因,生物标志物可能有助于评估和治疗慢性疼痛。尿液代谢物可能是有价值的生物指标,可以提供关于慢性疼痛的生物学见解。目的:研究成人慢性疼痛患者代谢物的多标志物复合测量与患者报告的结局评分之间的关系,使用一项具有顺序、多任务随机试验设计的实用临床试验的数据。方法:收集169例慢性疼痛现役军人的自述量表和尿样。使用预先建立的代谢物组分析尿液,包括四种先前确定的疼痛生物标志物:犬尿酸、焦谷氨酸、乙基丙二酸和甲基丙二酸。采用多变量线性回归模型(调整了参与者的年龄和性别等特征)横断面检验了11个患者报告的结果(疲劳、睡眠相关障碍、焦虑、抑郁、愤怒、疼痛灾难、身体功能、疼痛干扰、参与社会角色的满意度、疼痛强度、和疼痛影响评分)和四种尿液代谢物(尿代谢物疼痛指标,或UMPI)的单独和复合。考虑到本研究的小样本量和探索性,所有分析均采用p≤0.10的显著性阈值。结果:UMPI与五项自我报告的测量(疲劳、焦虑、抑郁、身体功能和疼痛影响评分)有统计学显著相关性;调整后的Pearson相关性在0.18到0.25之间。个体代谢物分析支持这些发现,个体代谢物与自我报告测量之间的所有关系都显示出正相关。Kynurenic acid和乙基丙二酸表现出最强的相关性,每一种都与四种自我报告的测量有统计学意义的关系,而焦谷氨酸与三种自我报告的测量有统计学意义的关系,而甲基丙二酸则没有。验证了UMPI的可行性和可靠性。讨论:我们发现UMPI与自我报告测量的组成部分之间存在关联,这支持了UMPI和这四种尿液代谢物作为慢性疼痛结局生物标志物的发展。进一步的研究计划,将是必不可少的建立机制的洞察力和指导生物标志物的开发在疼痛管理的背景下。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Urine Metabolites as Indicators of Chronic Pain and Related Symptoms in Active-Duty Service Members.

Abstract: Background: Chronic pain is a major cause of distress and disability, and biomarkers may aid in the assessment and treatment of it. Urine metabolites may be valuable bioindicators that can provide biological insight regarding chronic pain.Objectives: To investigate the relationship between a multimarker composite measure of metabolites and patient-reported outcomes scores in adults with chronic pain, using data from a pragmatic clinical trial with a sequential, multiple-assignment randomized trial design.Methods: Self-reported measures and urine samples from 169 active-duty service members with chronic pain were collected. Urine was analyzed using a preestablished panel of metabolites, including four previously identified biomarkers of pain: kynurenic acid, pyroglutamic acid, ethylmalonic acid, and methylmalonate. Multivariable linear regression models-adjusted for participant characteristics such as age and sex-were used to cross-sectionally examine the relationship between 11 patient-reported outcomes (fatigue, sleep-related impairment, anxiety, depression, anger, pain catastrophizing, physical function, pain interference, satisfaction with participation with social roles, pain intensity, and pain impact score) and the four urine metabolites both individually and as a composite (urine metabolite pain indicator, or UMPI). Given the study's small sample size and exploratory nature, a significance threshold of p ≤ .10 was used for all analyses.Results: The UMPI showed statistically significant associations with five self-reported measures (fatigue, anxiety, depression, physical functioning, and pain impact score); adjusted Pearson correlations ranged from .18 to .25. Individual metabolite analyses supported these findings, with all relationships between individual metabolites and self-reported measures showing positive associations. Kynurenic acid and ethylmalonic acid showed the strongest associations, each having statistically significant relationships with four individual self-reported measures, while pyroglutamic acid had statistically significant relationships with three self-reported measures and methylmalonate with none. The UMPI demonstrated feasible reliability.Discussion: Our finding of associations between the UMPI and components of the self-reported measures supports the development of the UMPI and these four urine metabolites as biomarkers for chronic pain outcomes. Further research is planned and will be essential for establishing mechanistic insight and guiding biomarker development within the context of pain management.

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来源期刊
Nursing Research
Nursing Research 医学-护理
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
4.00%
发文量
102
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Nursing Research is a peer-reviewed journal celebrating over 60 years as the most sought-after nursing resource; it offers more depth, more detail, and more of what today''s nurses demand. Nursing Research covers key issues, including health promotion, human responses to illness, acute care nursing research, symptom management, cost-effectiveness, vulnerable populations, health services, and community-based nursing studies. Each issue highlights the latest research techniques, quantitative and qualitative studies, and new state-of-the-art methodological strategies, including information not yet found in textbooks. Expert commentaries and briefs are also included. In addition to 6 issues per year, Nursing Research from time to time publishes supplemental content not found anywhere else.
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