Background
Chronic pain in sickle cell disease has been defined as pain on most days over 6 months. In the landmark Pain in Sickle Cell Epidemiology Study, 60% of patients submitted < 5 of the expected 6 months of pain diaries. Identifying chronic SCD pain using this long daily assessment interval is impractical. We therefore examined whether shorter, less burdensome intervals could accurately identify chronic sickle cell disease pain.
Method
As the gold-standard sample, we chose the 116 Pain in Sickle Cell Epidemiology Study patients who submitted > 5 months of diaries (153) and >49% of diaries during all months from 1-4. Using the same dataset, we tested daily diary assessment over shorter intervals: 2 weeks, 1 month, 2 months, 3 months, and 4 months. We defined chronic pain as intensity rated as > 0 on > 50% of diary days, regardless of interval. We then calculated the sensitivity and specificity of each diary interval.
Results
Among the gold-standard sample, 51.3% of patients had diary-defined chronic pain. Collection intervals of two months or more yielded similar chronic pain prevalences with identically high sensitivity (98.3%) and specificity (93%). Intervals of one month and two weeks yielded increasingly lower specificity (80.7%, 73.7% respectively), but preserved sensitivity (≥96.6%).
Conclusion
In the Pain in Sickle Cell Epidemiology Study, intervals of two months or more of daily diary collection yielded high sensitivity and specificity, compared to an interval of 5-6 months. One may reasonably diagnose chronic sickle cell disease pain using two months of daily diaries.