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  4. Prediction of persistent post-surgery pain by preoperative cold pain sensitivity: Biomarker development with machine-learning-derived analysis
 
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2017
Journal Article
Title

Prediction of persistent post-surgery pain by preoperative cold pain sensitivity: Biomarker development with machine-learning-derived analysis

Abstract
Background. To prevent persistent post-surgery pain, early identification of patients at high risk is a clinical need. Supervised machine-learning techniques were used to test how accurately the patients' performance in a preoperatively performed tonic cold pain test could predict persistent post-surgery pain. Methods. We analysed 763 patients from a cohort of 900 women who were treated for breast cancer, of whom 61 patients had developed signs of persistent pain during three yr of follow-up. Preoperatively, all patients underwent a cold pain test (immersion of the hand into a water bath at 2-4 degrees C). The patients rated the pain intensity using a numerical ratings scale (NRS) from 0 to 10. Supervised machine-learning techniques were used to construct a classifier that could predict patients at risk of persistent pain. Results. Whether or not a patient rated the pain intensity at NRS=10 within less than 45 s during the cold water immersion test provided a negative predictive value of 94.4% to assign a patient to the "persistent pain" group. If NRS=10 was never reached during the cold test, the predictive value for not developing persistent pain was almost 97%. However, a low negative predictive value of 10% implied a high false positive rate. Conclusion. Results provide a robust exclusion of persistent pain in women with an accuracy of 94.4%. Moreover, results provide further support for the hypothesis that the endogenous pain inhibitory system may play an important role in the process of pain becoming persistent.
Author(s)
Lötsch, J.
Ultsch, A.
Kalso, E.
Journal
British journal of anaesthesia : BJA  
Project(s)
GLORIA
Funder
European Commission  
DOI
10.1093/bja/aex236
Additional link
Full text
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Molekularbiologie und Angewandte Oekologie IME  
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