Changes and thresholds in the Oxford Shoulder Score following shoulder arthroplasty: Minimal clinically important difference, minimal important and detectable changes, and patient-acceptable symptom state.

IF 1.2 Q3 ECONOMICS
National Institute Economic Review Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Epub Date: 2023-05-17 DOI:10.1177/17585732231176423
Perry Liu, Irrum Afzal, Vipin Asopa, Nick D Clement, Vipul Patel
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: The minimal clinically important difference, minimal important change, minimal detectable change and patient-acceptable symptom state are poorly defined for the Oxford Shoulder Score following shoulder arthroplasty. The study's aim was to calculate their values.

Methods: One hundred patients underwent shoulder arthroplasty and completed pre and 1-year postoperative Oxford Shoulder Score. Patient satisfaction was assessed at 1-year using a visual analogue scale from 0 to 100: 'very satisfied' (>80), 'satisfied' (>60-80), and 'unsatisfied' (≤60). The difference between patients recording 'unsatisfied' (n  =  11) and 'satisfied' (n  =  16) was used to define the minimal clinically important difference. MICcohort was calculated as the change in Oxford Shoulder Score for those satisfied (>60). Receiver-operating characteristic curve analysis was used to determine the MICindividual and patient-acceptable symptom state. Distribution-based methodology was used for the minimal detectable change.

Results: The minimal clinically important difference was 6.9 (95% confidence interval 0.7-13.1, p  =  0.039). The MICcohort was 11.6 (95% confidence interval 6.8-16.4) and MICindividual 13. The minimal detectable change was 6.6 and the patient-acceptable symptom state was defined as ≥29.

Discussion: The minimal clinically important difference and minimal important change can assess whether there is a clinical difference between two groups and whether a cohort/patient has had a meaningful change in their Oxford Shoulder Score, respectively. These were greater than measurement error (minimal detectable change), suggesting a real change. The patient-acceptable symptom state can be used as a marker of achieving satisfaction.

肩关节置换术后牛津肩关节评分的变化和阈值:最小临床重要差异、最小重要且可检测到的变化以及患者可接受的症状状态。
背景:肩关节置换术后牛津肩关节评分的最小临床重要差异、最小重要变化、最小可检测变化和患者可接受症状状态的定义尚不明确。本研究的目的是计算其数值:方法:100 名患者接受了肩关节置换术,并完成了术前和术后 1 年的牛津肩关节评分。术后1年的患者满意度采用0至100的视觉模拟评分法进行评估:"非常满意"(>80)、"满意"(>60-80)和 "不满意"(≤60)。记录 "不满意"(11 人)和 "满意"(16 人)的患者之间的差异被用来定义最小临床重要性差异。MICcohort计算的是满意(>60)患者的牛津肩关节评分变化。接收者工作特征曲线分析用于确定 MIC 个人和患者可接受的症状状态。最小可检测变化采用基于分布的方法:最小临床重要性差异为 6.9(95% 置信区间为 0.7-13.1,P = 0.039)。队列 MIC 为 11.6(95% 置信区间为 6.8-16.4),个体 MIC 为 13。最小可检测到的变化为 6.6,患者可接受的症状状态定义为≥29.讨论:讨论:最小临床重要差异和最小重要变化可分别评估两组之间是否存在临床差异,以及同组/患者的牛津肩关节评分是否发生了有意义的变化。这两个指标均大于测量误差(最小可检测变化),表明存在实际变化。患者可接受的症状状态可作为达到满意度的标志。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
9.50%
发文量
21
期刊介绍: The National Institute Economic Review is the quarterly publication of the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, one of Britain"s oldest and most prestigious independent research organisations. The Institutes objective is to promote, through quantitative research, a deeper understanding of the interaction of economic and social forces that affect peoples" lives so that they may be improved. It has no political affiliation, and receives no core funding from government. Its research programme is organised under the headings of Economic Modelling and Analysis; Productivity; Education and Training and the International Economy.
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