Personalized Multimodal Lifestyle Intervention as the Best-Evidenced Treatment for Chronic Pain: State-of-the-Art Clinical Perspective

J Clin Med. 2024 Jan 23;13(3):644. doi: 10.3390/jcm13030644.

Abstract

Chronic pain is the most prevalent disease worldwide, leading to substantial disability and socioeconomic burden. Therefore, it can be regarded as a public health disease and major challenge to scientists, clinicians and affected individuals. Behavioral lifestyle factors, such as, physical (in)activity, stress, poor sleep and an unhealthy diet are increasingly recognized as perpetuating factors for chronic pain. Yet, current management options for patients with chronic pain often do not address lifestyle factors in a personalized multimodal fashion. This state-of-the-art clinical perspective aims to address this gap by discussing how clinicians can simultaneously incorporate various lifestyle factors into a personalized multimodal lifestyle intervention for individuals with chronic pain. To do so the available evidence on (multimodal) lifestyle interventions targeting physical (in)activity, stress, sleep and nutritional factors, specifically, was reviewed and synthetized from a clinical point of view. First, advise is provided on how to design a personalized multimodal lifestyle approach for a specific patient. Subsequently, best-evidence recommendations on how to integrate physical (in)activity, stress, sleep and nutritional factors as treatment targets into a personalized multimodal lifestyle approach are outlined. Evidence supporting such a personalized multimodal lifestyle approach is growing, but further studies are needed.

Keywords: chronic pain; lifestyle; nutrition; physical activity; sleep management; stress management.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

A.M. and E.H. are postdoctoral research fellows of the Research Foundation–Flanders (FWO). T.B. is supported by the EUTOPIA Science and Innovation Fellowship Programme and funded by the European Union Horizon 2020 Programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No. 945380. A.L., E.J. and W.V.B. are research fellows funded by the Research Foundation–Flanders (FWO). This work was also supported by the Strategic Research Program SRP90 (‘Pain Never Sleeps: Unravelling the Sleep-Pain Interaction in Patients with Chronic Pain’) funded by the research council of the Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels, Belgium.