Stratified Care for Low Back Pain: Difference between revisions

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*Orebro Screening Tool
*Orebro Screening Tool


=== <br> 2. Responsiveness to treatment ===
=== <br> 2. Responsiveness to treatment ===


matching treatments to patients who would benefit from that treatment. Main evidence is primarily in acute and sub-acute back pain. - identify categories of interventions that have evidence for their effectiveness, those intervention groups are manual therapy and exercise, specific directional exercises, stabilisation exercises, traction - this approach is built around the concept of clinical prediction rules  
matching treatments to patients who would benefit from that treatment. Main evidence is primarily in acute and sub-acute back pain. - identify categories of interventions that have evidence for their effectiveness, those intervention groups are manual therapy and exercise, specific directional exercises, stabilisation exercises, traction - this approach is built around the concept of clinical prediction rules  
*[[Treatment Based Classification Approach to Low Back Pain]]


=== <br> 3. Underlying mechanisms ===
=== <br> 3. Underlying mechanisms ===

Revision as of 15:01, 24 October 2015

Introduction[edit | edit source]

Steps to Stratification[edit | edit source]

Usual management of LBP is:

  1. Diagnostic triage by first contact clinical (physio, doctor) - rule out serious spinal pathology such as inflammatory disorders, metastases, infection or specific conditions such as radiculopathy, caudal equina syndrome
  2. After ruling these out a diagnosis of “non-specific” (simple or mechanical) LBP is given:
    1. advice and analgesia  (NICE guidelines - https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg88)
    2. other interventions - exercise, manual therapy, acupuncture (PT guidelines) 

Stratified care has been suggested as an appropriate way to manage LBP and the interventions mentioned above (Foster,N at al. WCPT Congress 2015).  Although not yet in clinical guidleines stratified care is a way of targeting treatment to subgroups of patients based on characteristics.

Stratification of Care[edit | edit source]

There are 3 approaches to subgrouping patients and targeting their treatment that have good evidence:

1. Patient prognosis[edit | edit source]

matching treatment to patients risk of poor outcome (likelihood of persistent pain and disability). Proven to be both clinically and cost effective. Early decisions about amount of therapy and broad direction of therapy a patient receives. Great in primary care. - low risk patients are not over treated or medicalised - support to self manage with advice, reassurance, medication - at risk patients get access to the right person early on - evidence based physiotherapy - enhanced comprehensive care is given to complex cases - psychologically informed physiotherapy with enhanced skills and more time.  Examples of this are:


2. Responsiveness to treatment
[edit | edit source]

matching treatments to patients who would benefit from that treatment. Main evidence is primarily in acute and sub-acute back pain. - identify categories of interventions that have evidence for their effectiveness, those intervention groups are manual therapy and exercise, specific directional exercises, stabilisation exercises, traction - this approach is built around the concept of clinical prediction rules


3. Underlying mechanisms
[edit | edit source]

matching treatment to mechanisms that drive pain and disability (pathology, pain mechanisms, provocative behaviours, negative thoughts/distress) examples. Been tested and makes sense in chronic back pain patients

  1. pathoanatomical based classification approach (Peterson et al 2003 - http://fysio.dk/Upload/Graphics/PDF-filer/Afhandlinger/phd_afhandling/Phd_Petersen_Non-specific_low_back_pain.pdf and http://rgk.kk.dk/sites/rgk.kk.dk/files/Diagnostic%20classification%20of%20non-specific%20low%20back%20pain.pdf) - mechanical
  2. diagnosis and treatment approach (McKenzie 2003) - http://www.researchgate.net/publication/8153747_A_systematic_review_of_efficacy_of_McKenzie_therapy_for_spinal_pain -
  3. multidimensional behavioural approach (O’Sullivan 2012) - negative beliefs about LBP, fear of movement, increased distress and decreased self efficacy are predictive of disability. Use screening tools and interview to identify beliefs, behaviours and understand of pain. Target these behaviours with a cognitive functional approach - give them a personalised understanding (a biopsychsocial understanding) of LBP drawing out features of their story and reflecting it back in a way that makes sense to them. Goal setting is critical to take people back to things that they value. Retraining functional movement and changing unhealthy lifestyle choices such as activity avoidance to reach goals. (http://www.pain-ed.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/Osullivan-and-Lin-Pain-management-today-2014.pdf and http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3796866/


The Future
[edit | edit source]

There are overlaps between these three different approaches. Perfect subgrouping approach would include all there of these approaches. We are not there yet.

Hancock suggests that the Start Back approach and/or treatment based approach is appropriate for Acute/subacute NSLBP unless do not recover when should use cognitive functional therapy approach. The cognitive functional therapy approach makes most sense in Chronic NSLBP. Start back tool can also be used but minimal care group is less likely to be effective.

These models don’t replace clinical reasoning or experience but they do warrant judicious exploration in clinical practice in appropriate settings (Foster, N WCPT Congress)