Supplementary data: Physical, Emotional and Social Pain Communication by Patients Diagnosed and Living with Multiple Myeloma
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Supplementary
Table 1: Definition of aspects of pain
Supplementary Table 2: Thresholds for clinical importance
for the EORTC QLQ-C30 scores
Supplementary Table 3: Health-related
quality of life by multiple myeloma patient self-reported pain severity
Supplementary Table 4: Level of
agreement between symptoms reported by patients in self-reported symptoms
list and EORTC-QLQ-MY20 (using Cohen's kappa analysis)
Supplementary Table 6: Level of
agreement between symptoms reported by patients and those recorded by the
treating physician at their face-to-face clinical consultation (using Cohen's
kappa analysis)
Physical,
Emotional and Social Pain Communication by Patients Diagnosed and Living with
Multiple Myeloma
ABSTRACT
Background: To
describe physical, social, and emotional aspects of
pain self-reported by patients with multiple myeloma (MM), and patient-physician communication of physical pain.
Methods: We analysed self-reported data
from 330 adults receiving anti-MM therapy in Germany and Italy on
health-related quality of life (EORTC QLQ-C30, -MY20) and bone pain symptoms.
Results: Patients experienced clinically
important physical (69%), emotional (58%) and social (22%) pain. Less than
three-quarters of physicians’ records matched patients’ perception of bone
pain (71.5%), with bone pain not recorded in 19.7% of patients experiencing
it. Nearly half of physicians underestimated bone pain severity.
Conclusion: Patients with MM experience
physical, social and emotional pain. Discordance
regarding bone pain symptoms and severity was observed, suggesting the need for
improved communication.
创建时间:
2021-06-18



