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EXERCISE-BASED INTERVENTIONS IN MULTIDISCIPLINARY REHABILITATION FOR REDUCING FEAR AVOIDANCE IN NON-SPECIFIC CHRONIC LOW BACK PAIN: SYSTEMATIC REVIEW

The Society for Back Pain Research (SBPR) Annual General Meeting 2019, ‘From Bench to Bedside’. Sheffield, England, 5–6 September 2019.



Abstract

Background and Purpose

Non-specific chronic low back pain (NSCLBP) poses a significant disability and economic burden worldwide. Fear avoidance is suggested to contribute to its chronicity and reduced treatment effect. National guidelines recommend exercise as a component of multidisciplinary rehabilitation but its interaction with fear avoidance is ambiguous.

This systematic review examined the effect of exercise-based interventions (EBIs) on fear avoidance NSCLBP.

Methods and Results

RCTs comparing EBIs to usual care in adults with NSCLBP were included. A systematic search of CINAHL, Medline, EMBASE, Web of Science, Scopus and Cochrane Library (up to January 2019) revealed 10 eligible trials. Following risk of bias assessment, 6 studies were included for data extraction and narrative synthesis. EBIs were not found superior to usual care in reducing fear avoidance at any follow-up. There was evidence that reducing fear avoidance is probably not the mechanism through which EBIs affect pain and disability. In adherent patients, EBIs did not result in greater clinically relevant improvements in pain or disability than usual care, in the short- or intermediate-term.

Conclusion

Addition of EBIs as part of multidisciplinary rehabilitation is not more beneficial than that of usual care in reducing fear avoidance in NSCLBP patients. However, the findings of this review are based on heterogenous studies presenting with methodological limitations. Further high-quality research is required to examine the review's findings and investigate current physiotherapy management of fear avoidance in NSCLBP.

No conflicts of interest

No funding obtained


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