Wound care procedures, such as dressing changes, cause moderate to severe pain in 74% of patients, nearly half (36%) of whom experience severe pain (rated as 8 to 10 on a 10-point numeric rating scale). Severe pain causes substantial stress for both patient and nurse. Unfortunately, the high prevalence of severe pain during WCPs is under-recognized and under-studied. To date, mainstay recommendations to prevent pain during WCPs have focused on either administration of preventive and procedural analgesia or use of expensive, non-adherent dressings. However, it is unclear which patients to target for analgesia or expensive dressings, leading to their inappropriate over or under use. Analgesics are given to only 23% of patients undergoing WCPs and dressings that may decrease pain are given to even fewer. The ability to predict which patients are likely to have severe pain during WCPs is critically needed so that they can be targeted for preventive pain control strategies, including use of opioid analgesics and special dressings.
Aim 1 of this study is to develop and evaluate a model to predict severe pain during WCPs. Although opioids are often given for highly painful conditions, they may not be an optimal or adequate strategy for controlling pain in open wounds because they impair wound healing and could lead to wound chronicity. The arsenal of alternatives to opioids is extremely limited because the biological mechanisms that contribute to nociceptive sensitivity and high pain during WCPs are unknown. Knowledge of these mechanisms would direct the development of new, effective interventions.
Aim 2 is to identify these mechanisms. We have assembled an exceptional multi-disciplinary team of investigators to execute the aims of this proposal. These include investigators with expertise in: clinical research of chronic wounds (PI: Gardner), clinical (Investigator: Rakel) and basic science (Consultant: Brennan) research of pain, genomic technologies to measure wound bioburden (Investigator: Grice), and statistical analyses, including receiver operating curves (Statistician: Hillis). To achieve the aims of the study, a comprehensive set of wound, patient, and biological factors will be measured concurrently with pain during a dressing change among a sample of 450 inpatients with open wounds. A predictive model will be developed and biological mechanisms will be examined using logistic regression. The model will be evaluated using receiver operator characteristic curves. The proposed study has the potential to make significant contributions because clinicians will be able to target those patients requiring preventive pain control, thereby eliminating the spiraling impact of painful procedures on nociceptor sensitization. In addition, the findings will provide foundational evidence for the development of needed, novel pain control strategies. The positive impact will be to optimize wound care, minimize adverse effects of pain and treatment, and reduce the costs associated with wound care.

Public Health Relevance

The proposed research is relevant to public health because pain control during wound care procedures is essential in order to promote thorough wound care, prevent infection, promote healing and prevent wound chronicity, and minimize human suffering. This project addresses a common health condition and an important area central to NINR's mission, the symptom of pain associated wound care procedures. This study reaches across three topic areas highlighted in the 'Chronic Wounds: Advancing the Science from Prevention to Healing' Funding Opportunity Announcement, including 1) Symptoms (e.g., pain, fatigue) and symptom clusters associated with chronic wounds, 2) Bacterial colonization of chronic wounds and the role of contributing factors that further compromise the ability to effectively address infection, and 3) Estimation of an individual's risk for poor outcomes.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01NR015642-05
Application #
9671464
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZNR1)
Program Officer
Tully, Lois
Project Start
2015-06-01
Project End
2021-03-31
Budget Start
2019-04-01
Budget End
2021-03-31
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
2019
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Iowa
Department
Type
Schools of Nursing
DUNS #
062761671
City
Iowa City
State
IA
Country
United States
Zip Code
52242
Fiala, Catherine A; Abbott, Linda I; Carter, Cheryl D et al. (2018) Severe pain during wound care procedures: A cross-sectional study protocol. J Adv Nurs :
Gardner, Sue E; Abbott, Linda I; Fiala, Catherine A et al. (2017) Factors associated with high pain intensity during wound care procedures: A model. Wound Repair Regen 25:558-563