Spasticity-related pain in children/adolescents with cerebral palsy. Part 1: Prevalence and clinical characteristics from a pooled analysis.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-2022

Publication Title

Journal of Pediatric Rehabilitation Medicine

Abstract

PURPOSE: A large prospective database from three Phase 3 studies allowed the study of spasticity-related pain (SRP) in pediatric cerebral palsy (CP).

METHODS: Baseline (pretreatment) SRP data occurring during different activities in children/adolescents (aged 2-17 years, ambulant/nonambulant) with uni-/bilateral spastic CP was obtained using the Questionnaire on Pain caused by Spasticity (QPS; six modules specific to spasticity level [lower limb (LL) or upper limb (UL)] and type of respondent [child/adolescent, interviewer, or parent/caregiver]).

RESULTS: At baseline, 331 children/adolescents with LL- and 155 with UL-spasticity completed at least one key item of their modules; LL/UL QPS modules of parent/caregivers were at least partially completed (key items) by 841/444 parents/caregivers. SRP with at least one activity at baseline was self-reported in 81.9% /69.7% (LLs/ULs) of children/adolescents with spasticity. Parents/caregivers observed LL/UL SRP behaviors in 85.9% /77.7% of their children, with multiple body regions affected. SRP negatively affected the great majority of the children in various ways. Child/adolescent-reported mean SRP intensity and parent/caregiver-observed mean SRP behavior frequencies were higher for LLs than ULs, and the level of SRP increased with more physically demanding activities.

CONCLUSION: These data suggest SRP is more common and intense in pediatric CP than generally thought, emphasizing the need for effective, long-term pain management.

Volume

15

Issue

1

First Page

129

Last Page

143

DOI

10.3233/PRM-220011

ISSN

1875-8894

PubMed ID

35342060

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