Scientific article
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English

Is it time to agree upon a standardised approach to the assessment of contributing factors and impacts of adolescent pelvic pain ?

Published inJournal of obstetrics and gynaecology, vol. 44, no. 1, 2359126
Publication date2024-12
First online date2024-05-30
Abstract

Background: A biopsychosocial approach to the understanding of pelvic pain is increasingly acknowledged. However, there is a lack of standardised instruments - or their use - to assess risk factors and their impact on pelvic pain in both clinical and research settings. This review aims to identify validated tools used to assess known contributory factors to pelvic pain, as well as the validated tools to measure the impact of pelvic pain in adolescents and young adults, in order to provide a framework for future standardised, adolescent specific assessment and outcome tools.

Methods: Literature searches were performed in MEDLINE, PsycInfo and PubMed. Search terms included pelvic pain, dysmenorrhoea, endometriosis, adolescent, pain measurement, quality of life, sleep, mental health, coping strategies and traumatic experience.

Results: We found validated instruments to assess adverse childhood experiences and coping strategies, both known contributing factors to pelvic pain. The impact of pain was measured through validated tools for health-related quality of life, mental health and sleep.

Conclusions: Pelvic pain evaluation in adolescents should include a multi-factorial assessment of contributing factors, such as childhood adversity and coping strategies, and impacts of pelvic pain on quality of life, mental health and sleep, using validated instruments in this age group. Future research should focus on the development of consensus amongst researchers as well as input from young women to establish a standardised international approach to clinical trials involving the investigation and reporting of pelvic pain in adolescents. This would facilitate comparison between studies and contribute to improved quality of care delivered to patients.

Plain language summary : Pelvic pain is pain located in the lower abdomen, and includes period pain, which is the most common gynaecologic condition in adolescents and young adults. An approach that includes biological, psychological and social factors is important to understand and manage pelvic pain. Nonetheless, these factors are often poorly assessed in the clinic and research setting. We performed a literature review to identify tools that measure risk factors for pelvic pain, and those that evaluate the impact of pelvic pain. We found instruments that measure exposure to childhood trauma and coping strategies, which are risk factors for developing pelvic pain. We found tools to assess quality of life, mental health and sleep as an impact of pelvic pain. A standardised approach to pelvic pain, including instruments to measure risk factors and impact of pelvic pain, would facilitate comparison between studies and improve quality of care for patients.

Keywords
  • Pelvic pain
  • Adolescent
  • Dysmenorrhoea
  • Mental health
  • Quality of life
  • Risk factor
  • Humans
  • Pelvic Pain / psychology
  • Pelvic Pain / etiology
  • Female
  • Quality of Life
  • Adaptation, Psychological
  • Pain Measurement / methods
  • Risk Factors
  • Mental Health
  • Adverse Childhood Experiences / psychology
  • Dysmenorrhea / psychology
  • Young Adult
  • Sleep / physiology
Affiliation entities Not a UNIGE publication
Citation (ISO format)
MOUSSAOUI, Dehlia, FARRELL, Olivia G, GROVER, Sonia R. Is it time to agree upon a standardised approach to the assessment of contributing factors and impacts of adolescent pelvic pain ? In: Journal of obstetrics and gynaecology, 2024, vol. 44, n° 1, p. 2359126. doi: 10.1080/01443615.2024.2359126
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accessLevelPublic
Identifiers
Journal ISSN0144-3615
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Creation10/21/2024 1:28:15 PM
First validation03/24/2025 10:02:41 AM
Update time10/15/2025 3:44:23 PM
Status update10/15/2025 3:44:23 PM
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