Centers for Rehab Services, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
J Orthop Sports Phys Ther. 2012 Aug;42(8):716-23. doi: 10.2519/jospt.2012.4038. Epub 2012 Mar 8.
Secondary analysis, pretreatment-posttreatment observational study.
To compare the reliability and responsiveness of the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC), the Knee Outcome Survey activities of daily living subscale (KOS-ADL), and the Lower Extremity Functional Scale (LEFS) in individuals with knee osteoarthritis (OA).
The WOMAC is the current standard in patient-reported measures of function in patients with knee OA. The KOS-ADL and LEFS were designed for potential use in patients with knee OA. If the KOS-ADL and LEFS are to be considered viable alternatives to the WOMAC for measuring patient-reported function in individuals with knee OA, they should have measurement properties comparable to the WOMAC. It would also be important to determine whether either of these instruments may be superior to the WOMAC in terms of reliability or responsiveness in this population.
Data from 168 subjects with knee OA, who participated in a rehabilitation program, were used in the analyses. Reliability and responsiveness of each outcome measure were estimated at follow-ups of 2, 6, and 12 months. Reliability was estimated by calculating the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC2,1) for subjects who were unchanged in status from baseline at each follow-up time, based on a global rating of change score. To examine responsiveness, the standard error of the measurement, minimal detectable change, minimal clinically important difference, and the Guyatt responsiveness index were calculated for each outcome measure at each follow-up time.
All 3 outcome measures demonstrated reasonable reliability and responsiveness to change. Reliability and responsiveness tended to decrease somewhat with increasing follow-up time. There were no substantial differences between outcome measures for reliability or any of the 3 measures of responsiveness at any follow-up time.
The results do not indicate that one outcome measure is more reliable or responsive than another when applied to subjects with knee OA. We believe that all 3 instruments are appropriate outcome measures to examine change in functional status of patients with knee OA.
二次分析,预处理-后处理观察研究。
比较骨关节炎指数(WOMAC)、膝关节结果调查日常生活活动量表(KOS-ADL)和下肢功能量表(LEFS)在膝关节骨关节炎(OA)患者中的可靠性和反应性。
WOMAC 是目前膝关节 OA 患者功能报告测量的标准。KOS-ADL 和 LEFS 专为膝关节 OA 患者潜在使用而设计。如果 KOS-ADL 和 LEFS 要被视为测量膝关节 OA 患者报告功能的可行替代 WOMAC,那么它们应该具有与 WOMAC 相当的测量特性。确定这两种仪器在该人群中的可靠性或反应性方面是否任何一种都优于 WOMAC 也很重要。
分析使用了 168 名参加康复计划的膝关节 OA 患者的数据。在 2、6 和 12 个月的随访中,估计了每种结果测量的可靠性和反应性。可靠性通过计算在每个随访时间基于变化评分的总体评分保持不变的患者的组内相关系数(ICC2,1)来估计。为了检查反应性,在每个随访时间计算了每种结果测量的测量误差标准、最小可检测变化、最小临床重要差异和 Guyatt 反应性指数。
所有 3 种结果测量均显示出合理的可靠性和对变化的反应性。随着随访时间的增加,可靠性和反应性往往略有下降。在任何随访时间,结果测量之间的可靠性或任何 3 种反应性测量均没有实质性差异。
结果表明,当应用于膝关节 OA 患者时,一种结果测量并不比另一种更可靠或更有反应性。我们认为,所有 3 种仪器都是检查膝关节 OA 患者功能状态变化的合适的结果测量。