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Use of the STarT Back Screening Tool in patients with chronic low back pain receiving physical therapy interventions
Authors:Flávia Cordeiro Medeiros  Evelyn Cassia Salomão  Leonardo Oliveira Pena Costa  Diego Galace de Freitas  Thiago Yukio Fukuda  Renan Lima Monteiro  Marco Aurélio Nemitalla Added  Alessandra Narciso Garcia  Lucíola da Cunha Menezes Costa
Affiliation:1. Masters and Doctoral Programs in Physical Therapy, Universidade Cidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, SP, Brazil;2. Irmandade da Santa Casa de Misericórdia de São Paulo, São Paulo, SP, Brazil;3. Instituto Trata - Hip and Knee Rehab, São Paulo, SP, Brazil;4. Department of Physical Therapy, Speech and Occupational Therapy, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, SP, Brazil;5. Doctor of Physical Therapy Division, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA
Abstract:BackgroundThe STarT Back Screening Tool (SBST) is used to stratify care. It is unclear if the SBST approach works as well for patients in low- and medium-income countries as for patients from high-income countries.Objectives(1) To investigate whether patients with chronic low back pain (LBP) stratified by the SBST are different at baseline; (2) to describe the clinical course for each SBST subgroup; (3) to investigate the SBST utility to predict clinical outcomes; and (4) to determine which SBST subgroup show greater clinical improvement.DesignThis is a secondary analysis of data derived from a previously published clinical trial.Methods148 patients with chronic nonspecific LBP were included. Pain intensity, disability, global perceived effect, and the SBST were assessed at baseline and at 5, 12, and 24 weeks after baseline. Descriptive data were provided and ANOVA, unadjusted and adjusted regression models, and linear mixed models were used for data analysis.ResultsDuration of symptoms, use of medication, pain, disability, and global perceived effect were different between SBST subgroups. Clinical improvements over a 6-month period were consistently greater in patients classified as high risk. The SBST was able to predict disability but this predictability decreased when the analysis was adjusted for possible confounders.ConclusionClinical outcomes were different between SBST subgroups over 6 months. Adjusting for confounders influenced the predictability of SBST. Patients classified as high risk presented higher improvements in terms of disability.
Keywords:STarT Back  Prediction  Physical therapy  Prognosis  Chronic low back pain
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