Pain catastrophising and resilience influence outcomes following total knee arthroplasty

Isabelle Kris, Adrian Kan, William Talbot, Wayne A Hing, Larissa Sattler

Research output: Contribution to conferenceAbstractResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Aim:
To examine correlations between pre-operative pain catastrophising and resilience with post-operative outcomes in primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA) patients.

Design:
Systematic review

Methods:
Five databases were systematically searched from inception until July 2024. Cohort studies investigating correlations between pre-operative pain catastrophising or resilience and post-operative outcomes in TKA patients were included. Methodological quality was assessed using the Joanna Briggs Institute Critical Appraisal Checklist. Results of individual studies were extracted and described through narrative and tabular synthesis. Study comparisons between pre-operative psychological measures and post-operative outcomes were grouped and reported on.

Results:
Fourteen studies (2,506 patients) of overall moderate methodological quality were included. Pain catastrophising showed statistically significant correlations with postoperative pain intensity and self-reported functional outcomes in 8/10 and 7/9 studies, respectively. Lower pre-operative resilience was associated with reduced postoperative self-reported function and physical performance in 2/3 studies. However, neither pain catastrophising nor resilience demonstrated consistent correlations with objective physical performance measures, analgesic requirements, other psychometric outcomes, or length of hospital stay.

Conclusion:
Pre-operative pain catastrophising consistently influences post-operative pain and functional outcomes following TKA, while resilience's impact was less conclusive.

Key practice points:
• Pre-operative psychological screening, particularly for pain catastrophising, may
identify patients at risk of suboptimal outcomes who could benefit from targeted
psychological interventions before undergoing TKA.
• Patients with high pain catastrophising may require additional support during
rehabilitation, as their heightened pain perception can lead to avoidance
behaviours that limit functional recovery and compromise surgical outcomes.
Original languageEnglish
Pages382-383
Number of pages2
Publication statusPublished - 24 Oct 2025
EventAustralian Physiotherapy Association Scientific Conference 2025: Lead the physiotherapy evolution - Adelaide Convention Centre, Adelaide, Australia
Duration: 23 Oct 202525 Oct 2025
https://physiotherapy.eventsair.com/apasc25/

Conference

ConferenceAustralian Physiotherapy Association Scientific Conference 2025: Lead the physiotherapy evolution
Abbreviated titleAPASC25
Country/TerritoryAustralia
CityAdelaide
Period23/10/2525/10/25
OtherAPA invites you to its biennial scientific conference APASC25, the Australian Physiotherapy Association Scientific Conference 2025.

Take this opportunity to:
•explore the latest in research, technology, evidence-based practice and social change
•advance your profession and enhance patient care
•learn from international and local speakers
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