Volume 21, Issue 11 pp. 1955-1961
ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Influence of pain score measured by a visual analog scale (PS-VAS) on the Health Assessment Questionnaire Disability Index and 28-joint Disease Activity Index with C-reactive protein in rheumatoid arthritis patients

Ichiro Yoshii

Corresponding Author

Ichiro Yoshii

Department of Rheumatology, Yoshii Hospital, Shimanto City, Japan

Correspondence: Ichiro Yoshii, MD, Department of Rheumatology, Yoshii Hospital, 6–7-5 Nakamura-Ohashidori, Shimanto City, 787–0033, Kochi Prefecture, Japan ([email protected]).Search for more papers by this author
Tatsumi Chijiwa

Tatsumi Chijiwa

Department of Rheumatology, Kochi Memorial Hospitals, Kochi City, Japan

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Naoya Sawada

Naoya Sawada

Department of Rheumatology, Dohgo Onsen Hospital, Matsuyama City, Japan

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First published: 02 September 2018
Citations: 14

Abstract

Background

Pain is a serious burden for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients. However, the effect on Health Assessment Questionnaire Disability Index (HAQ-DI) and 28-joint Disease Activity Score (DAS28) has not been presented. The aim of this study is to evaluate them in a case series.

Methods

Three hundred and eighty-two RA patients who were treated for more than 5 years were studied. The parameters assessed included average value of the DAS28 with C-reactive protein (DAS28-CRP), the HAQ-DI score, the Sharp/van der Heijde Score (SvdHS), age, and the pain score measured by a visual analog scale (PS-VAS). Relationships among these factors and the relationships between the HAQ-DI score and the other factors, and the relationships between the change in HAQ-DI scores and the changes in other factors were evaluated statistically with multivariate linear regression analysis. The effect of PS-VAS on HAQ-DI was compared with that of DAS28-CRP on the overlapping data of each parameter.

Results

HAQ-DI demonstrated significant positive correlations with all parameters. However, PS-VAS demonstrated a stronger effect than DAS28-CRP, also demonstrated without overlapping data. After minimizing the effects of DAS28-CRP, age and SvdHS, there was a significant correlation between HAQ-DI and PS-VAS in all analyses. The change in HAQ-DI demonstrated a significant correlation with the change in PS-VAS.

Conclusions

These results suggested that HAQ-DI is deeply influenced by PS-VAS. The effect of DAS28-CRP overlapped with the effect of PS-VAS in a major way. Pain control for RA patients is the most important factor contributing to activities of daily living, as well as disease activity control.

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