Patient-Defined Outcomes in Adults with Hip Dysplasia: What Activities Do Patients Hope to Improve with Treatment?

IF 3.8 Q2 ORTHOPEDICS
JBJS Open Access Pub Date : 2025-10-07 eCollection Date: 2025-10-01 DOI:10.2106/JBJS.OA.25.00051
John M Gaddis, Martin Salgado-Flores, Seunghoon Lee, Syed Ghazi, Hunter Butler, Edward P Mulligan, Charles South, Joel E Wells
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Patient-reported outcome measures have widely been used in the field of orthopaedics to determine treatment outcomes; however, they may not always align with the patient's goals for improvement following treatment. Therefore, we introduced the concept of patient-defined outcomes (PDOs): pretreatment goals or activities patients wish to improve following treatment, along with the patient-perceived difficulty and importance of these activities. This study aimed to evaluate PDOs in adults with hip dysplasia across 3 age groups while assessing patient variables for potential associations with choosing specific categories of activities.

Methods: We analyzed PDOs in 180 adults diagnosed with hip dysplasia, stratified into age groups: young adults (18-39 years), older adults (40-59 years), and senior adults (60 years or older). Patients listed at least 1 activity into the PDO questionnaire, followed by rating the difficulty and importance of the activity on a scale from zero to 10. PDOs were grouped into 6 thematic categories: sports, exercise, hobbies, activities of daily living (ADLs), work, and social engagement.

Results: ADLs were the most common PDO reported across all age groups, increasing from 47.2% of young adults to 68.2% of seniors, while exercise-related goals were the second most common reported PDO. Age and body mass index significantly positively related with choosing an ADL as a PDO (p = 0.017). Age (p = 0.041) and Pain Catastrophizing Score (p = 0.042) significantly negatively related, while University of California Activity Score (p = 0.020) showed a significant positive relationship, with reporting an exercise as a PDO. Almost all patients reported patient-perceived importance at the highest levels.

Conclusion: These findings underscore the impact hip dysplasia has on function, as most patients, regardless of age, expressed a desire to improve in basic ADLs. In addition, the importance levels of activities were consistently high across all age groups, highlighting the significance of aligning treatment goals with patient-centered outcomes.

Level of evidence: Level IV. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.

成人髋关节发育不良患者自定义的结局:患者希望通过治疗改善哪些活动?
导读:患者报告的结果测量已广泛应用于骨科领域,以确定治疗结果;然而,它们可能并不总是与患者治疗后改善的目标一致。因此,我们引入了患者定义结果(PDOs)的概念:患者希望在治疗后改善的预处理目标或活动,以及患者认为这些活动的难度和重要性。本研究旨在评估3个年龄组髋关节发育不良成人的PDOs,同时评估患者变量与选择特定活动类别的潜在关联。方法:我们分析了180名诊断为髋关节发育不良的成年人的PDOs,并将其分为年龄组:年轻人(18-39岁)、老年人(40-59岁)和老年人(60岁或以上)。患者在PDO问卷中至少列出一项活动,然后在0到10的范围内对活动的难度和重要性进行评分。pdo被分为6个主题类别:运动、锻炼、爱好、日常生活活动、工作和社会参与。结果:在所有年龄组中,adl是最常见的PDO,从年轻人的47.2%增加到老年人的68.2%,而与运动相关的目标是第二常见的PDO。年龄和体重指数与选择ADL作为PDO有显著正相关(p = 0.017)。年龄(p = 0.041)和疼痛灾变评分(p = 0.042)呈显著负相关,而加州大学活动评分(p = 0.020)与报告运动为PDO呈显著正相关。几乎所有患者都报告了患者感知到的最高程度的重要性。结论:这些发现强调了髋关节发育不良对功能的影响,因为大多数患者,无论年龄大小,都表达了改善基本adl的愿望。此外,在所有年龄组中,活动的重要性水平始终很高,突出了将治疗目标与以患者为中心的结果相一致的重要性。证据等级:IV级。参见《作者说明》获得证据等级的完整描述。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
JBJS Open Access
JBJS Open Access Medicine-Surgery
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
77
审稿时长
6 weeks
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