The epidemiology of pain during the last 2 years of life
- PMID: 21041575
- PMCID: PMC3150170
- DOI: 10.7326/0003-4819-153-9-201011020-00005
The epidemiology of pain during the last 2 years of life
Abstract
Background: The epidemiology of pain during the last years of life has not been well described.
Objective: To describe the prevalence and correlates of pain during the last 2 years of life.
Design: Observational study. Data from participants who died while enrolled in the Health and Retirement Study were analyzed. The survey interview closest to death was used. Each participant or proxy was interviewed once in the last 24 months of life and was classified into 1 of 24 cohorts on the basis of the number of months between the interview and death. The relationship between time before death and pain was modeled and was adjusted for age, sex, race or ethnicity, education level, net worth, income, terminal diagnosis category, presence of arthritis, and proxy status.
Setting: The Health and Retirement Study, a nationally representative survey of community-living older adults (1994 to 2006).
Participants: Older adult decedents.
Measurements: Clinically significant pain, as indicated by a report that the participant was "often troubled" by pain of at least moderate severity.
Results: The sample included 4703 decedents. Mean age (SD) of participants was 75.7 years (SD, 10.8); 83.1% were white, 10.7% were black, 4.7% were Hispanic; and 52.3% were men. The adjusted prevalence of pain 24 months before death was 26% (95% CI, 23% to 30%). The prevalence remained flat until 4 months before death (28% [CI, 25% to 32%]), then it increased, reaching 46% (CI, 38% to 55%) in the last month of life. The prevalence of pain in the last month of life was 60% among patients with arthritis versus 26% among patients without arthritis (P < 0.001) and did not differ by terminal diagnosis category (cancer [45%], heart disease [48%], frailty [50%], sudden death [42%], or other causes [47%]; P = 0.195).
Limitation: Data are cross-sectional; 19% of responses were from proxies; and information about cause, location, and treatment of pain was not available.
Conclusion: Although the prevalence of pain increases in the last 4 months of life, pain is present in more than one quarter of elderly persons during the last 2 years of life. Arthritis is strongly associated with pain at the end of life.
Primary funding source: National Institute on Aging, National Center for Research Resources, National Institute on Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, and National Palliative Care Research Center.
Figures
Comment in
-
Summaries for patients: Who reports having more pain at the end of life?Ann Intern Med. 2010 Nov 2;153(9):I30. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-153-9-201011020-00001. Ann Intern Med. 2010. PMID: 21041571 No abstract available.
-
What can population-based studies tell us about pain in the last years of life?Ann Intern Med. 2010 Nov 2;153(9):612-3. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-153-9-201011020-00013. Ann Intern Med. 2010. PMID: 21041582 No abstract available.
References
-
- Stewart AL, Teno J, Patrick DL, Lynn J. The concept of quality of life of dying persons in the context of health care. J Pain Symptom Manage. 1999;17(2):93–108. - PubMed
-
- Bernabei R, Gambassi G, Lapane K, Landi F, Gatsonis C, Dunlop R, Lipsitz L, Steel K, Mor V. Management of pain in elderly patients with cancer. SAGE Study Group. Systematic Assessment of Geriatric Drug Use via Epidemiology. Jama. 1998;279(23):1877–82. [see comments] [published erratum appears in JAMA 1999 Jan 13;281(2):136] - PubMed
-
- Lloyd-Williams M, Dennis M, Taylor F. A prospective study to determine the association between physical symptoms and depression in patients with advanced cancer. Palliat Med. 2004 Sep;18(6):558–63. - PubMed
-
- Steinhauser KE, Christakis NA, Clipp EC, McNeilly M, McIntyre L, Tulsky JA. Factors considered important at the end of life by patients, family, physicians, and other care providers. Jama. 2000 Nov 15;284(19):2476–82. - PubMed
-
- Ventafridda V, Ripamonti C, De Conno F, Tamburini M, Cassileth BR. Symptom prevalence and control during cancer patients' last days of life. J Palliat Care. 1990;6(3):7–11. - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources
Medical