Brief, self-report fibromyalgia screener evaluated in a sample of chronic pain patients.

Journal: Pain Medicine (Malden, Mass.)
Published:
Abstract

Objective: To validate a self-report fibromyalgia screener in a chronic pain population.

Methods: Adults with chronic pain were evaluated with a six-item, self-report fibromyalgia screening tool based on revised American College of Rheumatology (ACR) fibromyalgia diagnostic criteria, with fibromyalgia diagnosed when patients experienced chronic pain and scored ≥13 on the ACR fibromyalgia symptom severity scale. Patients were independently assigned clinical diagnoses by treating clinicians. Methods: University-based, tertiary care pain clinic. Methods: Three hundred thirty-seven mixed chronic pain patients.

Results: Agreement between the clinical diagnosis and screener diagnosis was good (P < 0.001), with 76% sensitivity and 82% specificity.

Conclusions: A self-administered, brief fibromyalgia screening questionnaire can effectively identify chronic pain patients who will likely have clinical fibromyalgia.

Authors
Dawn Marcus, Cheryl Bernstein, Kara Albrecht
Relevant Conditions

Chronic Pain, Fibromyalgia