Reaching MCID, SCB, and PASS for ASES, SANE, SST, and VAS following shoulder arthroplasty does not correlate with patient satisfaction

Q4 Medicine
Adam Z. Khan MD , Alayna Vaughan MD , Zachary S. Aman BS , Mark D. Lazarus MD , Gerald R. Williams MD , Surena Namdari MD
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Minimally clinically important difference (MCID), substantial clinical benefit (SCB), and patient acceptable symptomatic state (PASS) have been established in the literature to gauge shoulder arthroplasty treatment effectiveness. These metrics are established based on anchoring questions that do not account for a patient’s satisfaction with their surgical outcome. This study evaluates if reaching MCID, SCB, or PASS values for American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons (ASES), Single Assessment Numeric Evaluation (SANE), Simple Shoulder Test (SST), and visual analog scale (VAS) at 2 years following shoulder arthroplasty correlates with overall patient satisfaction.

Methods

This was a single-institution, retrospective, cohort study of all patients who underwent shoulder replacement from 2015 to 2019. Preoperative and 2-year postoperative ASES, SANE, SST, and VAS scores were recorded. Previously established MCID, SCB, and PASS values were used. Patients were contacted and underwent a survey to assess: (1) on a scale of 1 to 10, what is your overall satisfaction with your surgical outcome? (2) if you could go back in time, would you undergo this operation again? (yes/no); and (3) for the same condition, would you recommend this operation to a friend or family member? (yes/no). Spearman correlation coefficients were run to assess the relationship between reaching MCID, SCB, or PASS and the 3 outcome metrics above.

Results

Three hundred fifty two patients were included. Mean preoperative ASES was 42.2 ± 16.4, SANE was 35.5 ± 18.9, SST was 4.5 ± 2.6, and VAS was 5.3 ± 2.4. Mean 2-year ASES was 87.8 ± 16.0, SANE was 87.1 ± 15.7, SST was 9.8 ± 2.4, and VAS was 0.9 ± 1.8. Mean patient satisfaction was 9.0 ± 2.0, 331 (94.0%) patients would undergo surgery again, and 330 (93.8%) patients would recommend surgery. Spearman correlation coefficients were weak or very weak for reaching MCID, SCB, and PASS in ASES, SANE, SST, and VAS and all 3 study outcome metrics.

Discussion

Patient overall satisfaction is one of many considerations when indicating a patient for shoulder replacement and evaluating their ultimate long-term outcome. Reaching MCID, SCB, and PASS in ASES, SANE, SST, and VAS following shoulder arthroplasty did not correlate with a patient’s overall satisfaction, willingness to undergo surgery again, or willingness to recommend surgery to a friend or family member. Further investigation into the reliability and clinical value of currently defined MCID, SCB, and PASS metrics is needed.
肩关节置换术后的 ASES、SANE、SST 和 VAS 指标达到 MCID、SCB 和 PASS 与患者满意度无关
文献中已经建立了最小临床重要差异(MCID)、实际临床获益(SCB)和患者可接受症状状态(PASS)来衡量肩关节置换术的治疗效果。这些指标是建立在锚定问题的基础上,不考虑患者对手术结果的满意度。本研究评估美国肩关节外科医生(ASES)、单一评估数值评估(SANE)、简单肩关节测试(SST)和视觉模拟量表(VAS)在肩关节置换术后2年达到MCID、SCB或PASS值是否与患者总体满意度相关。方法:这是一项单机构、回顾性、队列研究,纳入了2015年至2019年所有接受肩关节置换术的患者。记录术前和术后2年的as、SANE、SST和VAS评分。使用先前确定的MCID、SCB和PASS值。患者被联系并接受了一项调查,以评估:(1)在1到10的范围内,您对手术结果的总体满意度是多少?如果你能回到过去,你会再做一次手术吗?(是/否);(3)对于同样的情况,你会向朋友或家人推荐这个手术吗?(是/否)。使用Spearman相关系数来评估达到MCID、SCB或PASS与上述3个结果指标之间的关系。结果共纳入352例患者。术前平均ase为42.2±16.4,SANE为35.5±18.9,SST为4.5±2.6,VAS为5.3±2.4。平均2年as为87.8±16.0,SANE为87.1±15.7,SST为9.8±2.4,VAS为0.9±1.8。患者平均满意度为9.0±2.0,331例(94.0%)患者会再次手术,330例(93.8%)患者会推荐手术。在as、SANE、SST和VAS及所有3个研究结果指标中,达到MCID、SCB和PASS的Spearman相关系数较弱或非常弱。患者总体满意度是建议患者进行肩关节置换术和评估其最终长期预后的众多考虑因素之一。肩关节置换术后在as、SANE、SST和VAS中达到MCID、SCB和PASS与患者的总体满意度、再次接受手术的意愿或向朋友或家人推荐手术的意愿无关。需要进一步研究目前定义的MCID、SCB和PASS指标的可靠性和临床价值。
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来源期刊
Seminars in Arthroplasty
Seminars in Arthroplasty Medicine-Surgery
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
104
期刊介绍: Each issue of Seminars in Arthroplasty provides a comprehensive, current overview of a single topic in arthroplasty. The journal addresses orthopedic surgeons, providing authoritative reviews with emphasis on new developments relevant to their practice.
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