Pain in adults with cystic fibrosis - Are we painfully unaware?

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Date Issued

Date Online

2025-01-25

Language

en

Review Status

Peer Review

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Open Access Open Access

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CC-BY-4.0

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Citation

Ward, Anastasia, Ramil Mauleon, Gretel Davidson, Chee Y. Ooi, and Nedeljka Rosić. "Pain in adults with cystic fibrosis–Are we painfully unaware?." Journal of Cystic Fibrosis (2025).

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Abstract/Description

"Background: A previous Australia-wide pilot study identified pain as a significant burden in people with CF (pwCF). However, the prevalence, frequency and severity have not been evaluated using validated tools. Methods: Australian adults, pwCF and healthy controls (HC) were invited to complete an online questionnaire from July 2023 – February 2024, consisting of four validated tools: Brief Pain Inventory, Pain Catastrophising Scale, PAGI-SYM and PAC-SYM. The questionnaire, disseminated via Cystic Fibrosis Australia, CF Together and online social media groups, explored experiences surrounding pain and its management using closed and free text entries. Results: There were 206 respondents, consisting of 117 CF patients and 89 HC. Over 70 % (n = 69) of pwCF reported pain compared to 28 % (n = 21) of HC (p = <0.001). Further, significantly higher pain frequency per month was reported for pwCF than HC (40 % vs. 10 %; p < 0.001). Symptom clustering was also observed where at least three other locations of pain were reported, and pain was reported to trigger other physiological and psychological symptoms. Notably, there was no significant difference in the locations, occurrence, frequency or severity of pain between those on a CFTR modulator or not (p = 0.625). PwCF also reported significantly lower relief from over-the-counter therapies (p = 0.002) and expressed themes of unmet symptom and management needs. Conclusions: This study identified a high prevalence of pain affecting multiple body parts in pwCF compared to HC and suggests that pain is sub-optimally managed, impairing their quality of life. Increased awareness and early recognition within the CF clinics and the development of clinical pathways are critically needed to better manage and monitor pain in pwCF, leading to improved quality of life and health outcomes."