Chiropractic + Naturopathic Doctor - December 2018

Research Reviews

Shawn Thistle 2018-11-23 00:52:40

A look at the STarT Back Tool

STUDY TITLE: The predictive ability of the STarT Back Tool was limited in people with chronic low back pain: a prospective cohort study

AUTHORS: Kendell M, Beales D, O’Sullivan P et al.

PUBLICATION INFORMATION: Journal of Physiotherapy 2018; 64: 107-113.

Background information

Chronic low back pain (LBP) is the leading cause of disability worldwide, and carries a tremendous economic burden. Evidence-based guidelines have recommended screening for poor prognostic indicators and stratifying LBP patients based on chronicity and disability risk. The STarT Back Tool (SBT) was created to enable primary care/first contact practitioners to dictate future LBP care pathways, based on the risk of future disability. A randomized trial demonstrated that a risk stratification approach based on the SBT resulted in better clinical outcomes and reduced costs compared to usual care in UK primary care consults. Since, multiple studies have been conducted supporting the psychometric properties, and the predictive and discriminative ability of the SBT. However, the SBT risk subgroups have not been profiled, nor have the tool’s predictive and discriminative ability been adequately investigated in a chronic LBP population. As such, the authors sought to determine the predictive and discriminative validity of the SBT for pain intensity, self-reported LBP-disability and self-perceived change at 1-year follow-up. They also hoped to determine the profile of the SBT chronic LBP risk subgroups with respect to demographic variables, pain intensity, self-reported disability and psychological measures.

Pertinent results

Follow-up data were available for 264 patients (91 per cent of the original sample of 290). No significant difference was found for age, gender or baseline pain intensity for responders and non-responders. Non-responders had higher baseline disability and risk status than responders. The SBT categorized 82 participants (28 per cent) as low risk, 116 (40 per cent) as high moderate risk and 92 (32 per cent) as high risk. The SBT risk subgroups did not differ significantly for most of the demographic variables, including pain duration. However, pain intensity and disability, increased stepwise from the low-risk group to the high-risk group. Also, consistently greater negative psychosocial affect and cognition, decreasing self-efficacy and chronic pain acceptance were also seen from the low-risk group through to the high-risk group.

Patients in the medium-risk and highrisk groups had a 25 per cent increased risk of not recovering with respect to pain compared to the low-risk group. Participants in the medium-risk group had a 130 per cent increased risk, and those in the high-risk group had a 186 per cent increased risk of not recovering with respect to disability, when compared to the low-risk group. However, although a higher proportion of both the medium and high-risk groups perceived themselves as not improved compared to the low-risk group, the difference in risk was not statistically-significant.

Interestingly, the positive likelihood ratios were higher and the negative likelihood ratios were lower for disability compared to pain. The sensitivity analysis using the follow-up measures showed that the SBT was significantly and most strongly predictive of disability (r2 = 0.09), significantly but less predictive of pain (r2 = 0.04) and not predictive of global perceived change (r2 = 0.00).

Applications, conclusions

The SBT was initially designed to risk-stratify patients with non-specific LBP into various chronicity and disability profiles and outcomes, with a matched care pathway for each subgroup. It has been shown to be predictive and discriminative of future disability due to LBP in primary care.

In this study, those in the higher SBT risk categories had significantly greater pain intensity and disability, higher scores on negative psychosocial outcomes, and lower scores on positive psychosocial constructs at baseline. This is consistent with past studies which have demonstrated that SBT risk subgroups are related to pain, disability, depression, fear avoidance beliefs, catastrophizing, kinesiophobia and anxiety. These results indicate that the SBT may be an acceptable surrogate measure for multiple full-length unidimensional measures. However, the SBT performed poorly with respect to pain intensity and subjective global perceived change at the 1-year follow- up. Therefore, using the SBT as a sole indicator of prognosis in chronic LBP is NOT recommended. However, the SBT should be used alongside the clinical examination and in conjunction with sound clinical reasoning when making care decisions for chronic LBP patients.

DR. SHAWN THISTLE is a practising chiropractor, educator, international speaker, knowledge-transfer leader, evidence-based health care advocate, entrepreneur and medicolegal consultant. He founded RRS Education in 2006 and currently acts as the company’s CEO. RRS Education helps chiropractors and other manual medicine clinicians around the world integrate research into patient care via weekly research reviews, online courses and seminars. rrseducation.com

©Annex. View All Articles.

Research Reviews
https://magazine.canadianchiropractor.ca/article/Research+Reviews/3245641/546299/article.html

Menu
  • Page View
  • Contents View
  • Advertisers
  • Website

Issue List

September/October 2022

July/August 2022

June 2022

March/April 2022

January/February 2022

November/December 2021

September/October 2021

July/August 2021

May/June 2021

March/April 2021

January-February 2021

December 2020

October 2020

September 2020

July/August 2020

June 2020

May 2020

April 2020

February 2020

December 2019

October 2019

September 2019

JulyAugust 2019

June 2019

May 2019

April 2019

February 2019

December 2018

October 2018

September 2018

July/August 2018

June 2018

May 2018

April 2018

February 2018

December 2017

October 2017

September 2017

July 2017

June 2017

May 2017

April 2017

February 2017

December 2016

October 2016

September 2016

July August 2016

June 2016

May 2016

April 2016

February 2016

December 2015

October 2015

September 2015

July August 2015

June 2015

May 2015

April 2015

February 2015

December 2014

October 2014

September 2014

July August 2014

June 2014

May 2014

April 2014

February 2014

December 2013

October 2013

September 2013

July/August 2013

June 2013

May 2013

April 2013

February 2013

December 2012

October 2012

September 2012

July/August 2012

June 2012

May 2012

February 2012

December 2011

October 2011

September 2011

July/August 2011

June 2011

May 2011

April 2011

April 2012

February 2011

December 2010

October 2010

September 2010

July/August 2010

June 2010

May 2010

April 2010

February 2010

December 2009

October 2009

September 2009

July/August 2009

June 2009

May 2009

April 2009

Febuary 2009

December 08

October 08

September 2008

July-Aug 08

June 2008

May 08

April 2008

March 20008

December 2007


Library