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INTRODUCTION: Day-case surgical activity is increasing in the UK yet there is a lack of data on the prevalence of chronic post-surgical pain in this population. This study uses data from the POPPY study to estimate the prevalence of chronic post-surgical pain after day-case surgery, its relationship with quality of life and also explores associated factors. METHODS: Data were collected from eligible consenting adults having day-case surgery in 199 sites across the UK. Baseline data were collected on the day of surgery, and patients were followed up by short message service-delivered questionnaires on day 1, day 3, day 7 and day 97. Chronic post-surgical pain was defined using pain severity scores at day 97. Multivariable logistic regression models were used to explore associations with chronic post-surgical pain. RESULTS: At day 97, 3442 patients had responded from a total of 7839 recruited. The estimated prevalence of chronic post-surgical pain was 7.2% (95%CI 6.4-8.1%). We found the following were associated with chronic post-surgical pain: week 1 pain scores; orthopaedic, breast and plastic surgical specialities; non-surgical site chronic pain at baseline; deprivation; and ethnicity. Patients with chronic post-surgical pain had a mean (SD) decrease of 0.137 (0.205) in health-related quality of life score compared with baseline. DISCUSSION: This is the first large UK multicentre, prospective observational study exploring chronic post-surgical pain after day-case surgery. Multivariable modelling highlighted several associated factors. Chronic post-surgical pain is common after day-case surgery and is associated with reduced quality of life.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1111/anae.70092

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2026-04-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

81

Pages

489 - 499

Total pages

10

Keywords

ambulatory surgery, chronic pain, day surgery, pain, patient‐reported outcome measures, Humans, Female, Postoperative Pain, Male, Middle Aged, Chronic Pain, Prevalence, Ambulatory Surgical Procedures, Quality of Life, Adult, Aged, United Kingdom, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, Pain Measurement, Pain Management, Surveys and Questionnaires