Burden of HIV-Related Neuropathic Pain in the United States.

Journal: Journal Of The International Association Of Providers Of AIDS Care
Published:
Abstract

Background: HIV-related neuropathic pain (HIV-NeP) is common; however, the burden of HIV-NeP is not well-understood.

Methods: The cross-sectional study aimed to characterize the HIV-NeP burden. A total of 103 patients with HIV-NeP recruited during routine office visits completed a questionnaire to assess patient-reported outcomes, including pain severity, health status, sleep, mood, and lost productivity. Physicians completed a 6-month retrospective chart review.

Results: The sample was predominantly male and not employed for pay. A majority (75.7%) of patients experienced moderate or severe pain. Pain interference, general health, physical health, and depression were worse among patients with more severe pain (all Ps < .006). Most (87.4%) patients were prescribed at least 1 medication for NeP. HIV-related neuropathic pain was associated with 36.1% work impairment. Adjusted annualized costs increased with increasing pain severity (P < .0001).

Conclusions: The impact of HIV-NeP on health status, physical function, and depression increases with severity, resulting in substantial clinical and economic burden.

Authors
Rachael Mann, Alesia Sadosky, Caroline Schaefer, Rebecca Baik, Bruce Parsons, Edward Nieshoff, Brett Stacey, Michael Tuchman, Srinivas Nalamachu
Relevant Conditions

Neuralgia