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  • Patient Perspectives Regarding Ethics of Neuromodulators in the Treatment of Persistent Postoperative Neuropathic Pain

    Final Number:
    123

    Authors:
    Nardin Samuel; Suneil Kumar Kalia MD, PhD, FRCS(C); Mark A. Bernstein MD; Mohammed F. Shamji MD PhD

    Study Design:
    Other

    Subject Category:

    Meeting: Congress of Neurological Surgeons 2016 Annual Meeting

    Introduction: The aim of this study is to better understand patients’ perspectives of persistent post-operative neuropathic pain (PPNP) and assess perceptions of the ethical issues surrounding implantation of neuromodulators, such as spinal cord stimulators (SCS), to treat PPNP in medically refractory patients.

    Methods: Semi-structured face-to-face interviews were conducted with patients from the neurosurgery clinics at Toronto Western Hospital. Interviews were audio recorded, transcribed and subjected to thematic analysis using open and axial coding.

    Results: The median age of the 18 study participants is 58 years and 44.4% (8/18) were female The range of the duration of pre-operative symptoms varied from one month to over 20 years, and was primarily back dominant (11/18). The median time since patients most recently underwent spinal surgery was 3 years. The majority of patients would be willing to have their surgeon re-operate on them if needed, citing a strong patient-physician relationship as the reason for this. Finally, nearly unanimously (17/18), patients did not perceive an ethical problem with a surgeon performing a structurally corrective spinal surgery and subsequently also implanting a SCS in the same patient that develops medically refractory PPNP. Broadly, patients cite trust in the surgeon and confidence in his or her competence as the most important factors in this perspective.

    Conclusions: The results of this work reveal that patients are comfortable with surgeons addressing their pain with all of the tools in their armamentarium, so long as they are well appraised of surgical risks and benefits and have open communication and trust in the physician-patient relationship.

    Patient Care: This is the first study to explore patient perceptions in this clinical domain. A better understanding of patient values is needed to eliminate barriers in surgical management and outcomes of PPNP.

    Learning Objectives: Describe patient perceptions of surgical management of PPNP Identify strategies to improve the patient-physician relationship in patients with PPNP

    References:

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