Background. Pain is one of the main aspects of hidradenitis suppurativa that strongly affects the quality of life of patients. We explored the relationship between pain and clinical severity as well as its role in defining the health status in patients with HS. Methods. Pain was defined by three measures: (a) question 1 ("my skin hurts") of the Skindex-17; (b) Bodily Pain (BP) scale of the SF-36; and (c) Visual Analog Scale (VAS). Clinical severity of HS was assessed by the Hurley staging, the Sartorius HS Score, and the International HS Severity Score System. Results. The study population included 341 HS patients with complete data for the VAS pain, 316 for question 1 of the Skindex-17, and 294 for BP. Clinical severity was positively associated with pain. This result was observed for all three severity scores and all three pain evaluation methods. In addition, the number of fistulae, abscesses, and nodules were significantly associated with the three severity measures of pain, while the association with scars was not observed for question 1 of the Skindex-17 and BP. Conclusions. Pain may be a good proxy of clinical severity and efficacy of a treatment in HS and therefore a crucial hallmark of patients' health status.

Pain as Defining Feature of Health Status and Prominent Therapeutic Target in Patients with Hidradenitis Suppurativa

Fania L;
2021-01-01

Abstract

Background. Pain is one of the main aspects of hidradenitis suppurativa that strongly affects the quality of life of patients. We explored the relationship between pain and clinical severity as well as its role in defining the health status in patients with HS. Methods. Pain was defined by three measures: (a) question 1 ("my skin hurts") of the Skindex-17; (b) Bodily Pain (BP) scale of the SF-36; and (c) Visual Analog Scale (VAS). Clinical severity of HS was assessed by the Hurley staging, the Sartorius HS Score, and the International HS Severity Score System. Results. The study population included 341 HS patients with complete data for the VAS pain, 316 for question 1 of the Skindex-17, and 294 for BP. Clinical severity was positively associated with pain. This result was observed for all three severity scores and all three pain evaluation methods. In addition, the number of fistulae, abscesses, and nodules were significantly associated with the three severity measures of pain, while the association with scars was not observed for question 1 of the Skindex-17 and BP. Conclusions. Pain may be a good proxy of clinical severity and efficacy of a treatment in HS and therefore a crucial hallmark of patients' health status.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14085/45242
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