Prevention and treatment of low back pain: evidence, challenges, and promising directions

2018 The Lancet 2,242 citations

Abstract

Many clinical practice guidelines recommend similar approaches for the assessment and management of low back pain. Recommendations include use of a biopsychosocial framework to guide management with initial non-pharmacological treatment, including education that supports self-management and resumption of normal activities and exercise, and psychological programmes for those with persistent symptoms. Guidelines recommend prudent use of medication, imaging, and surgery. The recommendations are based on trials almost exclusively from high-income countries, focused mainly on treatments rather than on prevention, with limited data for cost-effectiveness. However, globally, gaps between evidence and practice exist, with limited use of recommended first-line treatments and inappropriately high use of imaging, rest, opioids, spinal injections, and surgery. Doing more of the same will not reduce back-related disability or its long-term consequences. The advances with the greatest potential are arguably those that align practice with the evidence, reduce the focus on spinal abnormalities, and ensure promotion of activity and function, including work participation. We have identified effective, promising, or emerging solutions that could offer new directions, but that need greater attention and further research to determine if they are appropriate for large-scale implementation. These potential solutions include focused strategies to implement best practice, the redesign of clinical pathways, integrated health and occupational interventions to reduce work disability, changes in compensation and disability claims policies, and public health and prevention strategies.

Keywords

Biopsychosocial modelMedicinePsychological interventionLow back painEvidence-based practiceBest practicePromotion (chess)Physical therapyEvidence-based medicineMEDLINEAlternative medicineNursingPsychiatry

MeSH Terms

AnalgesicsOpioidChronic PainCost-Benefit AnalysisDiagnostic ImagingFemaleHumansLow Back PainMalePain ManagementPractice Guidelines as TopicUnited StatesUnited States Public Health Service

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2018
Type
review
Volume
391
Issue
10137
Pages
2368-2383
Citations
2242
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

2242
OpenAlex
64
Influential
1763
CrossRef

Cite This

Nadine E. Foster, Johannes R. Anema, Dan Cherkin et al. (2018). Prevention and treatment of low back pain: evidence, challenges, and promising directions. The Lancet , 391 (10137) , 2368-2383. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(18)30489-6

Identifiers

DOI
10.1016/s0140-6736(18)30489-6
PMID
29573872

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%