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Non-pharmacological Management of Persistent Headaches Associated with Neck Pain: A Clinical Practice Guideline from the Ontario Protocol for Traffic Injury Management (OPTIMa) Collaboration

Côté, Pierre; Yu, Hainan; Shearer, Heather M; Randhawa, Kristi; Wong, Jessica J; Mior, Silvano; Ameis, Arthur; Carroll, Linda J; Nordin, Margareta; Varatharajan, Sharanya; Sutton, Deborah; Southerst, Danielle; Jacobs, Craig; Stupar, Maja; Taylor-Vaisey, Anne; Gross, Douglas P; Brison, Robert J; Paulden, Mike; Ammendolia, Carlo; Cassidy, J David; Loisel, Patrick; Marshall, Shawn; Bohay, Richard N; Stapleton, John; Lacerte, Michel
OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:To develop an evidence-based guideline for the non-pharmacological management of persistent headaches associated with neck pain (i.e., tension-type or cervicogenic). METHODS:This guideline is based on systematic reviews of high-quality studies. A multidisciplinary expert panel considered the evidence of clinical benefits, cost-effectiveness, societal and ethical values, and patient experiences when formulating recommendations. Target audience includes clinicians; target population is adults with persistent headaches associated with neck pain. RESULTS:When managing patients with headaches associated with neck pain, clinicians should: 1) rule out major structural or other pathologies, or migraine as the cause of headaches; 2) classify headaches associated with neck pain as tension-type headache or cervicogenic headache once other sources of headache pathology has been ruled out; 3) provide care in partnership with the patient and involve the patient in care planning and decision-making; 4) provide care in addition to structured patient education; 5) consider low load endurance craniocervical and cervicoscapular exercises for tension-type headaches (episodic or chronic) or cervicogenic headaches >3 months duration; 6) consider general exercise, multimodal care (spinal mobilization, craniocervical exercise, and postural correction), or clinical massage for chronic tension-type headaches; 7) do not offer manipulation of the cervical spine as the sole form of treatment for episodic or chronic tension-type headaches; 8) consider manual therapy (manipulation with or without mobilization) to the cervical and thoracic spine for cervicogenic headaches >3 months duration. However, there is no added benefit in combining spinal manipulation, spinal mobilization, and exercises; and 9) reassess the patient at every visit to assess outcomes and determine whether a referral is indicated. CONCLUSIONS:Our evidence-based guideline provides recommendations for the conservative management of persistent headaches associated with neck pain. The impact of the guideline in clinical practice requires validation.
PMID: 30707486
ISSN: 1532-2149
CID: 3626962

The Global Spine Care Initiative: a summary of guidelines on invasive interventions for the management of persistent and disabling spinal pain in low- and middle-income communities

AcaroÄŸlu, Emre; Nordin, Margareta; Randhawa, Kristi; Chou, Roger; Côté, Pierre; Mmopelwa, Tiro; Haldeman, Scott
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:The purpose of this study was to synthesize recommendations on the use of common elective surgical and interventional procedures for individuals with persistent and disabling non-radicular/axial with or without myelopathy, radicular back pain, cervical myelopathy, symptomatic spinal stenosis, and fractures due to osteoporosis. This review was to inform a clinical care pathway on the patient presentations where surgical interventions could reasonably be considered. METHODS:We synthesized recommendations from six evidence-based clinical practice guidelines and one appropriate use criteria guidance for the surgical and interventional management of persistent and disabling spine pain. RESULTS:Lower priority surgery/conditions include fusion for lumbar/non-radicular neck pain and higher priority surgery/conditions include discectomy/decompressive surgery for cervical or lumbar radiculopathy, cervical myelopathy, and lumbar spinal stenosis. Epidural steroid injections are less expensive than most surgeries with fewer harms; however, benefits are small and short lived. Vertebroplasty should be considered over kyphoplasty as an option for patients with severe pain and disability due to osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Elective surgery and interventional procedures could be limited in medically underserved areas and low- and middle-income countries due to a lack of resources and surgeons and thus surgical and interventional procedures should be prioritized within these settings. There are non-invasive alternatives that produce similar outcomes and are a recommended option where surgical procedures are not available. These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.
PMID: 29322309
ISSN: 1432-0932
CID: 2946552

The Global Spine Care Initiative: a review of reviews and recommendations for the non-invasive management of acute osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture pain in low- and middle-income communities

Ameis, Arthur; Randhawa, Kristi; Yu, Hainan; Côté, Pierre; Haldeman, Scott; Chou, Roger; Hurwitz, Eric L; Nordin, Margareta; Wong, Jessica J; Shearer, Heather M; Taylor-Vaisey, Anne
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:The purpose of this review was to develop recommendations for non-invasive management of pain due to osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures (OVCF) that could be applied in medically underserved areas and low- and middle-income countries. METHODS:We conducted a systematic review and best evidence synthesis of systematic reviews on the non-invasive management of OVCF. Eligible reviews were critically appraised using the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network criteria. Low risk of bias systematic reviews and high-quality primary studies that were identified in the reviews were used to develop recommendations. RESULTS:From 6 low risk of bias systematic reviews and 14 high-quality primary studies we established that for acute pain management, in addition to rest and analgesic medication, orthoses may provide temporary pain relief, in addition to early mobilization. Calcitonin can be considered as a supplement to analgesics; however, cost is of concern. Once acute pain control is achieved, exercise can be effective for improving function and quality of life. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:The findings from this study will help to inform the GSCI care pathway and model of care for use in medically underserved areas and low- and middle-income countries. Conservative management of acute pain and recovery of function in adults with OVCF should include early mobilization, exercise, spinal orthosis for pain relief, and calcitonin for analgesic-refractory acute pain. These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.
PMID: 29038868
ISSN: 1432-0932
CID: 2945832

The Global Spine Care Initiative: a consensus process to develop and validate a stratification scheme for surgical care of spinal disorders as a guide for improved resource utilization in low- and middle-income communities

Acaroğlu, Emre; Mmopelwa, Tiro; Yüksel, Selcen; Ayhan, Selim; Nordin, Margareta; Randhawa, Kristi; Haldeman, Scott
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:The purpose of this study was to develop a stratification scheme for surgical spinal care to serve as a framework for referrals and distribution of patients with spinal disorders. METHODS:We used a modified Delphi process. A literature search identified experts for the consensus panel and the panel was expanded by inviting spine surgeons known to be global opinion leaders. After creating a seed document of five hierarchical levels of surgical care, a four-step modified Delphi process (question validation, collection of factors, evaluation of factors, re-evaluation of factors) was performed. RESULTS:Of 78 invited experts, 19 participated in round 1, and of the 19, 14 participated in 2, and 12 in 3 and 4. Consensus was fairly heterogeneous for levels of care 2-4 (moderate resources). Only simple assessment methods based on the clinical skills of the medical personnel were considered feasible and safe in low-resource settings. Diagnosis, staging, and treatment were deemed feasible and safe in a specialized spine center. Accurate diagnostic workup was deemed feasible and safe for lower levels of care complexity (from level 3 upwards) compared to non-invasive procedures (level 4) and the full range of invasive procedures (level 5). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:This study introduces a five-level stratification scheme for the surgical care of spinal disorders. This stratification may provide input into the Global Spine Care Initiative care pathway that will be applied in medically underserved areas and low- and middle-income countries. These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.
PMID: 29038871
ISSN: 1432-0932
CID: 2945842

The Global Spine Care Initiative: a narrative review of psychological and social issues in back pain in low- and middle-income communities

Cedraschi, Christine; Nordin, Margareta; Haldeman, Scott; Randhawa, Kristi; Kopansky-Giles, Deborah; Johnson, Claire D; Chou, Roger; Hurwitz, Eric L; Côté, Pierre
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:The purpose of this review was to describe psychological and social factors associated with low back pain that could be applied in spine care programs in medically underserved areas and low- and middle-income countries. METHODS:We performed a narrative review of cohort, cross-sectional, qualitative and mixed methods studies investigating adults with low back pain using Medline and PubMed were searched from January 2000 to June 2015. Eligible studies had at least one of the following outcomes: psychological, social, psychosocial, or cultural/ethnicity factors. Studies met the following criteria: (1) English language, (2) published in peer-reviewed journal, (3) adults with spinal disorders, (4) included treatment, symptom management or prevention. RESULTS:Out of 58 studies, 29 were included in this review. There are few studies that have evaluated psychological and social factors associated with back pain in low- and middle-income communities, therefore, adapting recommendations from other regions may be needed until further studies can be achieved. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Psychological and social factors are important components to addressing low back pain and health care providers play an important role in empowering patients to take control of their spinal health outcomes. Patients should be included in negotiating their spinal treatment and establishing treatment goals through careful listening, reassurance, and information providing by the health care provider. Instruments need to be developed for people with low literacy in medically underserved areas and low- and middle-income countries, especially where psychological and social factors may be difficult to detect and are poorly addressed. These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.
PMID: 29374779
ISSN: 1432-0932
CID: 2946652

The Global Spine Care Initiative: applying evidence-based guidelines on the non-invasive management of back and neck pain to low- and middle-income communities

Chou, Roger; Côté, Pierre; Randhawa, Kristi; Torres, Paola; Yu, Hainan; Nordin, Margareta; Hurwitz, Eric L; Haldeman, Scott; Cedraschi, Christine
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:The purpose of this review was to develop recommendations for the management of spinal disorders in low-income communities, with a focus on non-invasive pharmacological and non-pharmacological therapies for non-specific low back and neck pain. METHODS:We synthesized two evidence-based clinical practice guidelines for the management of low back and neck pain. Our recommendations considered benefits, harms, quality of evidence, and costs, with attention to feasibility in medically underserved areas and low- and middle-income countries. RESULTS:Clinicians should provide education and reassurance, advise patients to remain active, and provide information about self-care options. For acute low back and neck pain without serious pathology, primary conservative treatment options are exercise, manual therapy, superficial heat, and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). For patients with chronic low back and neck pain without serious pathology, primary treatment options are exercise, yoga, cognitive behavioral therapies, acupuncture, biofeedback, progressive relaxation, massage, manual therapy, interdisciplinary rehabilitation, NSAIDs, acetaminophen, and antidepressants. For patients with spinal pain with radiculopathy, clinicians may consider exercise, spinal manipulation, or NSAIDs; use of other interventions requires extrapolation from evidence regarding effectiveness for non-radicular spinal pain. Clinicians should not offer treatments that are not effective, including benzodiazepines, botulinum toxin injection, systemic corticosteroids, cervical collar, electrical muscle stimulation, short-wave diathermy, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, and traction. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Guidelines developed for high-income settings were adapted to inform a care pathway and model of care for medically underserved areas and low- and middle-income countries by considering factors such as costs and feasibility, in addition to benefits, harms, and the quality of underlying evidence. The selection of recommended conservative treatments must be finalized through discussion with the involved community and based on a biopsychosocial approach. Decision determinants for selecting recommended treatments include costs, availability of interventions, and cultural and patient preferences. These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.
PMID: 29460009
ISSN: 1432-0932
CID: 3000082

The Global Spine Care Initiative: public health and prevention interventions for common spine disorders in low- and middle-income communities

Green, Bart N; Johnson, Claire D; Haldeman, Scott; Kane, Edward J; Clay, Michael B; Griffith, Erin A; Castellote, Juan M; Smuck, Matthew; Rajasekaran, Shanmuganathan; Hurwitz, Eric L; Nordin, Margareta; Randhawa, Kristi; Yu, Hainan
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:The purpose of this study was to develop recommendations for prevention interventions for spinal disorders that could be delivered globally, but especially in underserved areas and in low- and middle-income countries. METHODS:We extracted risk factors, associations, and comorbidities of common spinal disorders (e.g., back and neck pain, spinal trauma, infection, developmental disorders) from a scoping review of meta-analyses and systematic reviews of clinical trials, cohort studies, case control studies, and cross-sectional studies. Categories were informed by the Global Spine Care Initiative (GSCI) classification system using the biopsychosocial model. Risk factors were clustered and mapped visually. Potential prevention interventions for individuals and communities were identified. RESULTS:Forty-one risk factors, 51 associations, and 39 comorbidities were extracted; some were associated with more than one disorder. Interventions were at primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary prevention levels. Public health-related actions included screening for osteopenia, avoiding exposure to certain substances associated with spinal disorders, insuring adequate dietary intake for vitamins and minerals, smoking cessation, weight management, injury prevention, adequate physical activity, and avoiding harmful clinical practices (e.g., over-medicalization). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Prevention principles and health promotion strategies were identified that were incorporated in the GSCI care pathway. Interventions should encourage healthy behaviors of individuals and promote public health interventions that are most likely to optimize physical and psychosocial health targeting the unique characteristics of each community. Prevention interventions that are implemented in medically underserved areas should be based upon best evidence, resource availability, and selected through group decision-making processes by individuals and the community. These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.
PMID: 30099669
ISSN: 1432-0932
CID: 3243172

The Global Spine Care Initiative: care pathway for people with spine-related concerns

Haldeman, Scott; Johnson, Claire D; Chou, Roger; Nordin, Margareta; Côté, Pierre; Hurwitz, Eric L; Green, Bart N; Cedraschi, Christine; AcaroÄŸlu, Emre; Kopansky-Giles, Deborah; Ameis, Arthur; Adjei-Kwayisi, Afua; Ayhan, Selim; Blyth, Fiona; Borenstein, David; Brady, O'Dane; Brooks, Peter; Camilleri, Connie; Castellote, Juan M; Clay, Michael B; Davatchi, Fereydoun; Dunn, Robert; Goertz, Christine; Griffith, Erin A; Hondras, Maria; Kane, Edward J; Lemeunier, Nadège; Mayer, John; Mmopelwa, Tiro; Modic, Michael; Moss, Jean; Mullerpatan, Rajani; Muteti, Elijah; Mwaniki, Lillian; Ngandeu-Singwe, Madeleine; Outerbridge, Geoff; Randhawa, Kristi; Shearer, Heather; Sönmez, Erkin; Torres, Carlos; Torres, Paola; Verville, Leslie; Vlok, Adriaan; Watters, William; Wong, Chung Chek; Yu, Hainan
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:The purpose of this report is to describe the development of an evidence-based care pathway that can be implemented globally. METHODS:The Global Spine Care Initiative (GSCI) care pathway development team extracted interventions recommended for the management of spinal disorders from six GSCI articles that synthesized the available evidence from guidelines and relevant literature. Sixty-eight international and interprofessional clinicians and scientists with expertise in spine-related conditions were invited to participate. An iterative consensus process was used. RESULTS:After three rounds of review, 46 experts from 16 countries reached consensus for the care pathway that includes five decision steps: awareness, initial triage, provider assessment, interventions (e.g., non-invasive treatment; invasive treatment; psychological and social intervention; prevention and public health; specialty care and interprofessional management), and outcomes. The care pathway can be used to guide the management of patients with any spine-related concern (e.g., back and neck pain, deformity, spinal injury, neurological conditions, pathology, spinal diseases). The pathway is simple and can be incorporated into educational tools, decision-making trees, and electronic medical records. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:A care pathway for the management of individuals presenting with spine-related concerns includes evidence-based recommendations to guide health care providers in the management of common spinal disorders. The proposed pathway is person-centered and evidence-based. The acceptability and utility of this care pathway will need to be evaluated in various communities, especially in low- and middle-income countries, with different cultural background and resources. These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.
PMID: 30151811
ISSN: 1432-0932
CID: 3256832

The Global Spine Care Initiative: World Spine Care executive summary on reducing spine-related disability in low- and middle-income communities

Haldeman, Scott; Nordin, Margareta; Chou, Roger; Côté, Pierre; Hurwitz, Eric L; Johnson, Claire D; Randhawa, Kristi; Green, Bart N; Kopansky-Giles, Deborah; AcaroÄŸlu, Emre; Ameis, Arthur; Cedraschi, Christine; Aartun, Ellen; Adjei-Kwayisi, Afua; Ayhan, Selim; Aziz, Amer; Bas, Teresa; Blyth, Fiona; Borenstein, David; Brady, O'Dane; Brooks, Peter; Camilleri, Connie; Castellote, Juan M; Clay, Michael B; Davatchi, Fereydoun; Dudler, Jean; Dunn, Robert; Eberspaecher, Stefan; Emmerich, Juan; Farcy, Jean Pierre; Fisher-Jeffes, Norman; Goertz, Christine; Grevitt, Michael; Griffith, Erin A; Hajjaj-Hassouni, Najia; Hartvigsen, Jan; Hondras, Maria; Kane, Edward J; Laplante, Julie; Lemeunier, Nadège; Mayer, John; Mior, Silvano; Mmopelwa, Tiro; Modic, Michael; Moss, Jean; Mullerpatan, Rajani; Muteti, Elijah; Mwaniki, Lillian; Ngandeu-Singwe, Madeleine; Outerbridge, Geoff; Rajasekaran, Shanmuganathan; Shearer, Heather; Smuck, Matthew; Sönmez, Erkin; Tavares, Patricia; Taylor-Vaisey, Anne; Torres, Carlos; Torres, Paola; van der Horst, Alexander; Verville, Leslie; Vialle, Emiliano; Kumar, Gomatam Vijay; Vlok, Adriaan; Watters, William; Wong, Chung Chek; Wong, Jessica J; Yu, Hainan; Yüksel, Selcen
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:Spinal disorders, including back and neck pain, are major causes of disability, economic hardship, and morbidity, especially in underserved communities and low- and middle-income countries. Currently, there is no model of care to address this issue. This paper provides an overview of the papers from the Global Spine Care Initiative (GSCI), which was convened to develop an evidence-based, practical, and sustainable, spinal healthcare model for communities around the world with various levels of resources. METHODS:Leading spine clinicians and scientists around the world were invited to participate. The interprofessional, international team consisted of 68 members from 24 countries, representing most disciplines that study or care for patients with spinal symptoms, including family physicians, spine surgeons, rheumatologists, chiropractors, physical therapists, epidemiologists, research methodologists, and other stakeholders. RESULTS:Literature reviews on the burden of spinal disorders and six categories of evidence-based interventions for spinal disorders (assessment, public health, psychosocial, noninvasive, invasive, and the management of osteoporosis) were completed. In addition, participants developed a stratification system for surgical intervention, a classification system for spinal disorders, an evidence-based care pathway, and lists of resources and recommendations to implement the GSCI model of care. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:The GSCI proposes an evidence-based model that is consistent with recent calls for action to reduce the global burden of spinal disorders. The model requires testing to determine feasibility. If it proves to be implementable, this model holds great promise to reduce the tremendous global burden of spinal disorders. These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.
PMID: 30151809
ISSN: 1432-0932
CID: 3256802

The Global Spine Care Initiative: methodology, contributors, and disclosures

Johnson, Claire D; Haldeman, Scott; Nordin, Margareta; Chou, Roger; Côté, Pierre; Hurwitz, Eric L; Green, Bart N; Kopansky-Giles, Deborah; Randhawa, Kristi; Cedraschi, Christine; Ameis, Arthur; AcaroÄŸlu, Emre; Aartun, Ellen; Adjei-Kwayisi, Afua; Ayhan, Selim; Aziz, Amer; Bas, Teresa; Blyth, Fiona; Borenstein, David; Brady, O'Dane; Brooks, Peter; Camilleri, Connie; Castellote, Juan M; Clay, Michael B; Davatchi, Fereydoun; Dudler, Jean; Dunn, Robert; Eberspaecher, Stefan; Emmerich, Juan; Farcy, Jean Pierre; Fisher-Jeffes, Norman; Goertz, Christine; Grevitt, Michael; Griffith, Erin A; Hajjaj-Hassouni, Najia; Hartvigsen, Jan; Hondras, Maria; Kane, Edward J; Laplante, Julie; Lemeunier, Nadège; Mayer, John; Mior, Silvano; Mmopelwa, Tiro; Modic, Michael; Moss, Jean; Mullerpatan, Rajani; Muteti, Elijah; Mwaniki, Lillian; Ngandeu-Singwe, Madeleine; Outerbridge, Geoff; Rajasekaran, Shanmuganathan; Shearer, Heather; Smuck, Matthew; Sönmez, Erkin; Tavares, Patricia; Taylor-Vaisey, Anne; Torres, Carlos; Torres, Paola; van der Horst, Alexander; Verville, Leslie; Vialle, Emiliano; Kumar, Gomatam Vijay; Vlok, Adriaan; Watters, William; Wong, Chung Chek; Wong, Jessica J; Yu, Hainan; Yüksel, Selcen
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:The purpose of this report is to describe the Global Spine Care Initiative (GSCI) contributors, disclosures, and methods for reporting transparency on the development of the recommendations. METHODS:World Spine Care convened the GSCI to develop an evidence-based, practical, and sustainable healthcare model for spinal care. The initiative aims to improve the management, prevention, and public health for spine-related disorders worldwide; thus, global representation was essential. A series of meetings established the initiative's mission and goals. Electronic surveys collected contributorship and demographic information, and experiences with spinal conditions to better understand perceptions and potential biases that were contributing to the model of care. RESULTS:Sixty-eight clinicians and scientists participated in the deliberations and are authors of one or more of the GSCI articles. Of these experts, 57 reported providing spine care in 34 countries, (i.e., low-, middle-, and high-income countries, as well as underserved communities in high-income countries.) The majority reported personally experiencing or having a close family member with one or more spinal concerns including: spine-related trauma or injury, spinal problems that required emergency or surgical intervention, spinal pain referred from non-spine sources, spinal deformity, spinal pathology or disease, neurological problems, and/or mild, moderate, or severe back or neck pain. There were no substantial reported conflicts of interest. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:The GSCI participants have broad professional experience and wide international distribution with no discipline dominating the deliberations. The GSCI believes this set of papers has the potential to inform and improve spine care globally. These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.
PMID: 30151808
ISSN: 1432-0932
CID: 3256792