The burden of preoperative fear-avoidance beliefs in workers after thoracic and lumbar spine surgery: a 2-year follow-up study.
Pablo Bellosta-LópezFrancesco LangellaMatteo PonzoRoberto BassaniMarco Brayda-BrunoMarco DamilanoFabrizio GiudiciAlessio LoviCarlotta MorselliAndrea RedaelliLaura ScaramuzzoClaudio LamartinaPedro BerjanoPublished in: Pain (2023)
Spinal disorders are the main reasons for sick leave and early retirement among the working population in industrialized countries. When "red flags" are present, spine surgery is the treatment of choice. However, the role of psychosocial factors such as fear-avoidance beliefs in spine surgery outcomes is still debated. The study aims to investigate whether patients presenting high or low levels of fear-avoidance thoughts before the spine surgery reported different surgical results and return-to-work rates over two years. From an institutional spine surgery registry, workers surgically treated with a preoperative score in the Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) higher than 20/100 and provided ODI questionnaires, return-to-work status at 3-, 6-, 12-, and 24-month follow-ups were analyzed. A total of 1769 patients were stratified according to the work subscale of the Fear-Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire (FABQ-W) in high-fear (FABQ-W≥34/42) or low-fear (FABQ-W<34/42). Multivariate regression was used to search for preoperative factors which might interact with FABQ-W. The higher-fear group showed a different recovery pattern, with higher levels of disability according to the ODI (total score, absolute change, frequency of clinically relevant change, and disability categories) and lower return-to-work ratios over the 24-month follow-up. High fear, high disability, greater age, female gender, smoking, and worse physical status at baseline were associated with worse ODI outcomes two years after surgery. In summary, fear-avoidance beliefs significantly influence the speed and the entity of surgical outcomes in the working population. However, the contribution of FABQ-W in predicting long-term disability levels was limited.
Keyphrases
- prefrontal cortex
- multiple sclerosis
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- mental health
- chronic kidney disease
- patients undergoing
- spinal cord
- minimally invasive
- physical activity
- metabolic syndrome
- acute coronary syndrome
- smoking cessation
- coronary artery bypass
- combination therapy
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- water quality