阴道顶脱垂手术后不良事件报告中的患者观点。

IF 8.7 1区 医学 Q1 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:许多临床试验采用系统的方法监测不良事件(AE),并根据临床医生的判断确定不良事件的等级(严重程度)、预期性以及与治疗的相关性。然而,在这一过程中仍然缺乏患者视角:目的:在一项泌尿妇科手术试验中,比较临床医生和患者对不良事件严重程度的分级。次要目标:估计患者对 AE 的分级与决策和生活质量结果之间的关联,并确定患者的观点是否会随着时间的推移而发生变化:这是一项计划中的补充研究,名为 "不良事件报告中的患者观点"(PPAR),是一项比较三种阴道顶端脱垂手术方法的随机试验。在母试验中,每 6 个月按照标准化方案收集患者发生的不良事件,由临床医生对不良事件的严重程度(轻度、中度、重度/危及生命)进行分级。在这项子研究中,我们针对 19 种预先确定的 "PPAR AE "获得了更多患者的纵向观点。患者在初次评估以及术后 12 个月和 36 个月时提供了自己的严重程度分级(轻度、中度、严重/非常严重/危及生命)。临床医生和患者对彼此的报告进行了屏蔽。主要结果是临床医生和患者在初次评估时对 AE 严重程度的相互一致性(卡帕统计量,κ),将患者的轻度和中度分级合并计算。AE 严重程度与决策后悔量表 (DRS)、决策满意度量表 (SDS)、短表格健康调查-12 (SF-12) 和患者总体改善印象 (PGI-I) 分数之间的关系采用连续量表的 Spearman 相关系数 (ρ)、PGI-I 的 Mantel-Haenszel 方差检验和比较严重与其他等级评估的 T 检验或方差检验进行评估。为了描述患者观点随时间的变化,使用加权卡帕系数估算了观察者内部对AE严重程度等级随时间变化的一致性:在360名随机患者中,219名(61%)共发生了527例PPAR不良反应(根据临床医生的分级,91%为中度,9%为重度/危及生命)。患者平均年龄为 67 岁,87% 为白人,12% 为西班牙裔。在报告任何 PPAR 事件的患者中,最常见的是尿路感染(61%)、新发尿急尿失禁(35%)、压力性尿失禁(22%)和大便失禁(13%)。临床医生和受试者对严重程度分级的总体一致性较差(κ=0.24 (95%CI 0.14, 0.34))。在临床医生分级为中度的 414 例 AE 中,患者分级为轻度的有 120 例(29%),重度的有 80 例(19%)。在临床医生分级为重度的 39 例 AE 中,患者分级为轻度或中度的有 15 例(38%)。患者对报告的最严重 AE 的最初分级与较差的 DRS(ρ=0.2,p=0.01)、SF-12(ρ=-0.24,pConclusions)轻度相关:临床医生和患者对 AE 严重程度的看法并不一致。从患者角度来看,严重程度较差与以患者为中心的结果有关。纳入患者视角可为外科手术评估提供更多信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Patient perspectives in adverse event reporting after vaginal apical prolapse surgery

Background

Many clinical trials use systematic methodology to monitor adverse events and determine grade (severity), expectedness, and relatedness to treatments as determined by clinicians. However, patient perspectives are often not included in this process.

Objective

This study aimed to compare clinician vs patient grading of adverse event severity in a urogynecologic surgical trial. Secondary objectives were to estimate the association of patient grading of adverse events with decision-making and quality of life outcomes and to determine if patient perspective changes over time.

Study Design

This was a planned supplementary study (Patient Perspectives in Adverse Event Reporting [PPAR]) to a randomized trial comparing 3 surgical approaches to vaginal apical prolapse. In the parent trial, adverse events experienced by patients were collected per a standardized protocol every 6 months during which clinicians graded adverse event severity (mild, moderate, severe/life-threatening). In this substudy, we obtained additional longitudinal patient perspectives for 19 predetermined “PPAR adverse events.” Patients provided their own severity grading (mild, moderate, severe/very severe/life-threatening) at initial assessment and at 12 and 36 months postoperatively. Clinicians and patients were masked to each other’s reporting. The primary outcome was the interrater agreement (kappa statistic) for adverse event severity between the initial clinician and patient assessment, combining patient grades of mild and moderate. The association between adverse event severity and the Decision Regret Scale, Satisfaction with Decision Scale, the 12-Item Short-Form Health Survey, and Patient Global Impression of Improvement scores was assessed using the Spearman correlation coefficient (ρ) for continuous scales, the Mantel–Haenszel chi-square test for Patient Global Impression of Improvement, and t tests or chi-square tests comparing the assessments of patients who rated their adverse events or symptoms as severe with those who gave other ratings. To describe patient perspective changes over time, the intraobserver agreement was estimated for adverse event severity grade over time using weighted kappa coefficients.

Results

Of the 360 randomly assigned patients, 219 (61%) experienced a total of 527 PPAR adverse events (91% moderate and 9% severe/life-threatening by clinician grading). Mean patient age was 67 years; 87% were White and 12% Hispanic. Among the patients reporting any PPAR event, the most common were urinary tract infection (61%), de novo urgency urinary incontinence (35%), stress urinary incontinence (22%), and fecal incontinence (13%). Overall agreement between clinician and participant grading of severity was poor (kappa=0.24 [95% confidence interval, 0.14–0.34]). Of the 414 adverse events that clinicians graded as moderate, patients graded 120 (29%) as mild and 80 (19%) as severe. Of the 39 adverse events graded as severe by clinicians, patients graded 15 (38%) as mild or moderate. Initial patient grading of the most severe reported adverse event was mildly correlated with worse Decision Regret Scale (ρ=0.2; P=.01), 12-Item Short-Form Health Survey (ρ=−0.24; P<.01), and Patient Global Impression of Improvement (P<.01) scores. There was no association between adverse event severity and Satisfaction with Decision Scale score. Patients with an initial grading of “severe” had more regret, lower quality of life, and poorer global impressions of health than those whose worst severity grade was mild (P<.05). Agreement between the patients’ initial severity ratings and their ratings at 12 months (kappa=0.48 [95% confidence interval, 0.39–0.58]) and 36 months (kappa=0.45 [95% confidence interval, 0.37–0.53]) was fair.

Conclusion

Clinician and patient perceptions of adverse event severity are discordant. Worse severity from the patient perspective was associated with patient-centered outcomes. Including the patient perspective provides additional information for evaluating surgical procedures.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
15.90
自引率
7.10%
发文量
2237
审稿时长
47 days
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, known as "The Gray Journal," covers the entire spectrum of Obstetrics and Gynecology. It aims to publish original research (clinical and translational), reviews, opinions, video clips, podcasts, and interviews that contribute to understanding health and disease and have the potential to impact the practice of women's healthcare. Focus Areas: Diagnosis, Treatment, Prediction, and Prevention: The journal focuses on research related to the diagnosis, treatment, prediction, and prevention of obstetrical and gynecological disorders. Biology of Reproduction: AJOG publishes work on the biology of reproduction, including studies on reproductive physiology and mechanisms of obstetrical and gynecological diseases. Content Types: Original Research: Clinical and translational research articles. Reviews: Comprehensive reviews providing insights into various aspects of obstetrics and gynecology. Opinions: Perspectives and opinions on important topics in the field. Multimedia Content: Video clips, podcasts, and interviews. Peer Review Process: All submissions undergo a rigorous peer review process to ensure quality and relevance to the field of obstetrics and gynecology.
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