Quantifying intra-individual variability in anatomical sites of pain in longitudinal studies
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Longitudinal pain studies present an opportunity to understand intra-individual variations in pain. However, current methods to quantify the anatomical extent of pain fail to capture variations across multiple body sites over time. Our aims were to (1) describe patterns of intra-individual variation in pain sites over time, (2) develop a metric that quantifies intra-individual variation in pain sites over time, and (3) determine whether this metric is related to other indicators of pain burden. We used data from a longitudinal cohort of 72 participants (51 female; median (IQR) age 43 (37-51) years) living with virally suppressed HIV, who provided weekly reports of pain severity, pain site(s), and distress over 49 weeks. Participant reports showed noteworthy intra-individual changes in pain sites over time. The pain sites variation metric, based on 727 consecutive reports from 53 participants, reflected intra-individual temporal variation in pain sites, and distinguished participants with consistent pain sites from participants with high temporal variation in pain sites. The metric was positively associated with pain severity and emotional distress, but only when unadjusted for the count of painful sites. Thus, using a longitudinal cohort, we developed a metric that quantifies individual temporal variability in pain sites and demonstrated its relationship to two frequently used metrics of pain burden, namely pain severity and distress. This metric provides an opportunity to study whether the number of, and variability in, pain sites contributes to pain burden and clinical outcomes.