Children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) experience fluctuating pain, stiffness and fatigue as a consequence of their disease. In spite of advances in medical therapy including the widespread use of methotrexate and biologic medications, pain persists as an unexpectedly common problem for children with JIA. We have previously shown that children with polyarticular arthritis experience pain on a majority (70%) of days with substantial adverse consequences such as interference with age appropriate social, academic, and physical functioning. Yet little is known about the daily patterns, moderators, and consequences of persistent pain in these children. We propose to use real-time assessments via electronic diaries to elucidate the pain experience of children with JIA and the moment-to-moment impact of child emotion regulation and caregiver response on pain-related disability. Seventy-five children with polyarticular JIA aged 8 to 16 will be recruited from the pediatric rheumatology clinic at Duke University Medical Center to participate in this study along with their primary caregiver. Consenting families will complete baseline and 3-month follow-up measures of pain, psychosocial adjustment, emotion regulation, and physical function and be trained in the use of electronic diaries on handheld computers for daily data collection. Following baseline assessment, children will complete three momentary assessments per day for two 14-day time periods assessing pain quality, current emotional state, and functioning across school, social, and physical domains. Similarly, primary caregivers will complete three momentary assessments on the same days as their children reporting their responses to child pain. We expect that pain will predict moment-to-moment functioning. However, we anticipate that successful child emotion regulation (within-day recovery from aversive emotional states or maintenance of desirable emotional states) and empowering responses by caregivers (responses that promote child emotion regulation) will lessen the extent to which pain leads to functional impairment in children with JIA. Results of this study will highlight areas for intervention to prevent pain-related disability in children with JIA, potentially reducing health care costs and enhancing quality of life for these children and their families. Symptom capture using the electronic diary methodology employed in the proposed study also may prove to be useful for assessing the effectiveness of therapeutic interventions in both individual patients and clinical trials. ? ?

Public Health Relevance

Children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis have pain despite new therapies. We propose to capture daily symptoms using electronic diary data collection symptom. This will result in significant contributions both to the theoretical understanding of the pain experience of children with JIA and how to intervene to prevent pain- related disability. Data may support aggressive pain control in children with this disease and suggest individualized treatment approaches for self-management of a child's pain at any given. Moreover, the innovative methodology proposed in this study for evaluating emotion regulation can expand the broader field of child development research, bridging research interests in child development, childhood chronic illness and child pain. Finally, the study can serve as a catalyst for future research aimed at advancing medical and psychological knowledge of pain in other pediatric medical populations. ? ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01AR053845-01A2
Application #
7526479
Study Section
Behavioral Medicine, Interventions and Outcomes Study Section (BMIO)
Program Officer
Tonkins, William P
Project Start
2008-08-17
Project End
2011-07-31
Budget Start
2008-08-17
Budget End
2009-07-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2008
Total Cost
$354,358
Indirect Cost
Name
Duke University
Department
Pediatrics
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
044387793
City
Durham
State
NC
Country
United States
Zip Code
27705
Gaultney, Amy C; Bromberg, Maggie H; Connelly, Mark et al. (2017) Parent and Child Report of Pain and Fatigue in JIA: Does Disagreement between Parent and Child Predict Functional Outcomes? Children (Basel) 4:
Connelly, Mark; Bromberg, Maggie H; Anthony, Kelly K et al. (2017) Use of Smartphones to Prospectively Evaluate Predictors and Outcomes of Caregiver Responses to Pain in Youth with Chronic Disease. Pain 158:629-636
Connelly, Mark; Bromberg, Maggie H; Anthony, Kelly K et al. (2016) Use of Smartphones to Prospectively Evaluate Predictors and Outcomes of Caregiver Responses to Pain in Youth with Chronic Disease. Pain :
Bromberg, Maggie H; Connelly, Mark; Anthony, Kelly K et al. (2016) Prospective Mediation Models of Sleep, Pain, and Daily Function in Children With Arthritis Using Ecological Momentary Assessment. Clin J Pain 32:471-7
Bromberg, Maggie H; Connelly, Mark; Anthony, Kelly K et al. (2014) Self-reported pain and disease symptoms persist in juvenile idiopathic arthritis despite treatment advances: an electronic diary study. Arthritis Rheumatol 66:462-9
Valrie, Cecelia R; Bromberg, Maggie H; Palermo, Tonya et al. (2013) A systematic review of sleep in pediatric pain populations. J Dev Behav Pediatr 34:120-8
Connelly, Mark; Anthony, Kelly K; Schanberg, Laura E (2012) Parent perceptions of child vulnerability are associated with functioning and health care use in children with chronic pain. J Pain Symptom Manage 43:953-60
Weiss, Pamela F; Beukelman, Timothy; Schanberg, Laura E et al. (2012) Enthesitis-related arthritis is associated with higher pain intensity and poorer health status in comparison with other categories of juvenile idiopathic arthritis: the Childhood Arthritis and Rheumatology Research Alliance Registry. J Rheumatol 39:2341-51
Connelly, Mark; Bromberg, Maggie H; Anthony, Kelly K et al. (2012) Emotion regulation predicts pain and functioning in children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis: an electronic diary study. J Pediatr Psychol 37:43-52
Bromberg, Maggie H; Gil, Karen M; Schanberg, Laura E (2012) Daily sleep quality and mood as predictors of pain in children with juvenile polyarticular arthritis. Health Psychol 31:202-9

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