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Classification of individual pain response trajectories following medically indicated heel lances in preterm infants during their NICU admission

Classification of individual pain response trajectories following medically indicated heel lances in preterm infants during their NICU admission
Classification of individual pain response trajectories following medically indicated heel lances in preterm infants during their NICU admission

Objectives: infants born preterm are exposed to repeated painful procedures during neonatal intensive care unit admission. Particularly in preterm infants, trajectories of pain response are not well understood. The aim of this study was to classify pain response trajectories over 2 minute following medically indicated heel lances in preterm infants.

Materials and methods: this study used existing clinical trial data (NCT01561547) that evaluated the efficacy of kangaroo care and sucrose for infant pain control. Pain was measured using the Premature Infant Pain Profile at 30, 60, 90, and 120 seconds following a heel lance. Group-based trajectory modeling was used to classify pain response in this 2 minute period.

Results: a total of 236 infants with median gestational age of 33 weeks contributed 610 procedures. A model with 5 trajectory classes best fit the data. Three trajectories were stable over time at different levels of intensity from low-mild to low-moderate pain. One trajectory reflected a linear reduction from high-moderate to low-moderate pain. The final trajectory showed variable moderate-high pain. At all times points, 3 classes were at least 1-point different from the overall sample mean pain score. Only 21 (9%) infants maintained the same class for all 3 procedures.

Discussion: in this sample of preterm infants receiving pain relief, most pain trajectories reflected mild to low-moderate pain that was stable over 2 minute after heel lance initiation. Trajectories were not consistent over multiple procedures within infants, and an overall mean pain score for the sample may misrepresent subgroups of pain response.

Heel, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Premature, Intensive Care Units, Neonatal, Pain, Pain Management/methods
0749-8047
151-158
Hundert, Amos
8091a3ef-52a7-404d-9d48-b35a70d45678
Woolcott, Christy
0cbc0cce-5b6b-458c-ab66-33def3590475
Dorling, Jon
e55dcb9a-a798-41a1-8753-9e9ff8aab630
Benoit, Britney
b36c0672-9422-4323-a392-2dbde14fa285
Campbell-Yeo, Marsha
fd416bfc-eef1-401e-8652-c049fb65e42a
Hundert, Amos
8091a3ef-52a7-404d-9d48-b35a70d45678
Woolcott, Christy
0cbc0cce-5b6b-458c-ab66-33def3590475
Dorling, Jon
e55dcb9a-a798-41a1-8753-9e9ff8aab630
Benoit, Britney
b36c0672-9422-4323-a392-2dbde14fa285
Campbell-Yeo, Marsha
fd416bfc-eef1-401e-8652-c049fb65e42a

Hundert, Amos, Woolcott, Christy, Dorling, Jon, Benoit, Britney and Campbell-Yeo, Marsha (2021) Classification of individual pain response trajectories following medically indicated heel lances in preterm infants during their NICU admission. The Clinical Journal of Pain, 38 (3), 151-158. (doi:10.1097/AJP.0000000000001011).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: infants born preterm are exposed to repeated painful procedures during neonatal intensive care unit admission. Particularly in preterm infants, trajectories of pain response are not well understood. The aim of this study was to classify pain response trajectories over 2 minute following medically indicated heel lances in preterm infants.

Materials and methods: this study used existing clinical trial data (NCT01561547) that evaluated the efficacy of kangaroo care and sucrose for infant pain control. Pain was measured using the Premature Infant Pain Profile at 30, 60, 90, and 120 seconds following a heel lance. Group-based trajectory modeling was used to classify pain response in this 2 minute period.

Results: a total of 236 infants with median gestational age of 33 weeks contributed 610 procedures. A model with 5 trajectory classes best fit the data. Three trajectories were stable over time at different levels of intensity from low-mild to low-moderate pain. One trajectory reflected a linear reduction from high-moderate to low-moderate pain. The final trajectory showed variable moderate-high pain. At all times points, 3 classes were at least 1-point different from the overall sample mean pain score. Only 21 (9%) infants maintained the same class for all 3 procedures.

Discussion: in this sample of preterm infants receiving pain relief, most pain trajectories reflected mild to low-moderate pain that was stable over 2 minute after heel lance initiation. Trajectories were not consistent over multiple procedures within infants, and an overall mean pain score for the sample may misrepresent subgroups of pain response.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 2 November 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 17 December 2021
Keywords: Heel, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Premature, Intensive Care Units, Neonatal, Pain, Pain Management/methods

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 485139
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/485139
ISSN: 0749-8047
PURE UUID: 8a56860e-0f22-4b31-8264-41a193d889f8
ORCID for Jon Dorling: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1691-3221

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Date deposited: 30 Nov 2023 17:35
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:16

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Contributors

Author: Amos Hundert
Author: Christy Woolcott
Author: Jon Dorling ORCID iD
Author: Britney Benoit
Author: Marsha Campbell-Yeo

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