Purpose: To examine how patients categorize their pain with the two commonly employed
scales.
Methods and Materials: Patients with bone metastases referred to an outpatient palliative
radiotherapy clinic were asked to rate their current pain on a numerical scale of 0–10 (0 = no
pain, 10 = worst pain possible) and a categorized scale: none, mild, moderate and severe.
Results: Two hundred and seventeen patients were enrolled in the study. The median age
was 66 years and median Karnofsky Performance Score was 70. The most common primary
cancer sites were lung, prostate and breast. Based on patient-evaluated symptoms, 60% of patients
who categorized pain as mild assigned it a 3 (24%) or 4 (36%), 63% who categorized
pain as moderate assigned it a 5 (16.9%), 6 (19.1%) or 7 (27%) and 80% who categorized pain
as severe assigned it an 8 (28.2%), 9 (12.6%) or 10 (39.8%).
Conclusion: Our patients scored pain as mild if pain was ≤4, moderate if pain was 5–7 and
severe if pain was ≥8.