M. Beninato, PT, DPT, PhD, Graduate Programs in Physical Therapy, MGH Institute of Health Professions, 36 1st Ave, CNY, Boston, MA 02129 (USA).
A. Fernandes, PT, MS, Physical Therapy, Brookline Healthcare Center, Brookline, Massachusetts.
Phys Ther. 2014 Nov;94(11):1594-603. doi: 10.2522/ptj.20130596. Epub 2014 Jun 19.
The Functional Gait Assessment (FGA) is commonly used to measure walking balance. The minimal clinically important difference (MCID) has yet to be determined for the FGA.
The purposes of this study were to determine: (1) the MCID in the FGA for older community-dwelling adults relative to patients' and physical therapists' estimates of change and (2) the extent of agreement between patients' and physical therapists' estimates of change.
This study was a prospective case series.
Patients and physical therapists rated the amount of change in balance while walking after an episode of physical therapy for balance retraining on a 15-point global rating of change (GROC) scale. Weighted kappa statistics were calculated to express agreement between patients' and physical therapists' GROC ratings. Functional Gait Assessment change scores were plotted on receiver operating characteristic curves. A cutoff of +3 on the GROC was the criterion used for important change. The optimal FGA change cutoff score for MCID was determined, and sensitivity (SN), specificity (SP), and likelihood ratios (LRs) were calculated.
One hundred thirty-five community-dwelling older adults (average age=78.8 years) and 14 physical therapists participated. There was poor agreement between the patients' and therapists' ratings of change (weighted kappa=.163). The estimated MCID value for the FGA using physical therapists' ratings of change as an anchor was 4 points (SN=0.66, SP=0.84, LR+=4.07, LR-=0.40). No accurate value for the FGA MCID could be determined based on the patients' ratings of change.
The small sample size was a limitation.
Poor agreement between therapists' and patients' ratings indicate the need for further communication relative to patient goals. The 4-point MCID value for the FGA can be used for goal setting, tracking patient progress, and program evaluation.
功能性步态评估(FGA)常用于测量步行平衡。但 FGA 的最小临床重要差异(MCID)尚未确定。
本研究旨在确定:(1)相对于患者和物理治疗师对变化的估计,FGA 在老年社区居住成年人中的 MCID;(2)患者和物理治疗师对变化的估计之间的一致性程度。
这是一项前瞻性病例系列研究。
患者和物理治疗师在平衡物理治疗后的平衡再训练阶段,使用 15 分制的整体变化评分量表(GROC)评估行走时平衡的变化程度。计算加权kappa 统计量以表示患者和物理治疗师 GROC 评分之间的一致性。绘制功能性步态评估变化评分的接收器操作特征曲线。GROC 评分的+3 分界点被用作重要变化的标准。确定了最佳的 FGA 变化分界点得分,计算了敏感性(SN)、特异性(SP)和似然比(LR)。
135 名社区居住的老年人(平均年龄=78.8 岁)和 14 名物理治疗师参与了研究。患者和治疗师对变化的评估之间存在较差的一致性(加权kappa=0.163)。使用物理治疗师对变化的评估作为锚定点,FGA 的估计 MCID 值为 4 分(SN=0.66,SP=0.84,LR+=4.07,LR-=0.40)。无法根据患者对变化的评估确定 FGA MCID 的准确值。
样本量小是一个限制。
治疗师和患者对变化的评估之间的一致性较差表明需要进一步就患者目标进行沟通。FGA 的 4 分 MCID 值可用于设定目标、跟踪患者进展和评估计划。