<p class="first" id="d16027348e134">The Visual Analogue Scale (VAS), Numeric Rating
Scale (NRS), and Pain Severity subscale
of the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI-PS) are the most frequently used instruments to measure
pain intensity in low back pain. However, their measurement properties in this population
have not been reviewed systematically. The goal of this study was to provide such
systematic evidence synthesis. Six electronic sources (MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsycINFO,
SportDiscus, Google Scholar) were searched (July 2017). Studies assessing any measurement
property in patients with nonspecific low back pain were included. Two reviewers independently
screened articles and assessed risk of bias using the COSMIN checklist. For each measurement
property, evidence quality was rated as high, moderate, low, or very low (GRADE approach)
and results were classified as sufficient, insufficient, or inconsistent. Ten studies
assessed the VAS, 13 the NRS, 4 the BPI-PS. The 3 instruments displayed low or very
low quality evidence for content validity. High-quality evidence was only available
for NRS insufficient measurement error. Moderate evidence was available for NRS inconsistent
responsiveness, BPI-PS sufficient structural validity and internal consistency, and
BPI-PS inconsistent construct validity. All VAS measurement properties were underpinned
by no, low, or very low quality evidence; likewise, the other measurement properties
of NRS and BPI-PS. PERSPECTIVES: Despite their broad use, there is no evidence clearly
suggesting that one among VAS, NRS, and BPI-PS has superior measurement properties
in low back pain. Future adequate quality head-to-head comparisons are needed and
priority should be given to assessing content validity, test-retest reliability, measurement
error, and responsiveness.
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