Division of Rheumatology, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, NY, USA.
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, NY, USA.
Arthritis Res Ther. 2017 Dec 6;19(1):267. doi: 10.1186/s13075-017-1476-9.
Our objective in this study was to examine whether stakeholders further endorse the core domain set proposed by the Outcome Measures in Rheumatology Trials (OMERACT) total joint replacement (TJR) working group.
We emailed a survey to 3810 hip/knee arthroplasty patients and 49 arthroplasty surgeons at a high-volume arthroplasty center to rate the importance of each core domain (i.e., pain, function, patient satisfaction, revision surgery, adverse events, and death) and two additional domains (i.e., cost and participation). Ratings were on a 1-9 scale, with 1-3 indicating limited or no importance for patients, 4-6 being important but not critical, and 7-9 being critical. We calculated median (IQR) values and compared ratings by sex, age, and participant type using the Wilcoxon rank-sum test.
The questionnaire was completed by 1295 patients (34%) and 21 surgeons (43%). Patient nonresponders were similar to responders in age (≥55 years, 85.7% vs. 88.6%), sex (female, 57.5% vs. 57.3%), and joint procedure (total hip replacement, 56.9% vs. 63.2%). Overall, all core domains and one noncore domain (i.e., participation) were confirmed as "critical" by both stakeholder groups. Cost was rated as only "important" but not "critical" by surgeons. A completed consensus for all the core domains persisted even when we stratified by sex, age, arthritis type, and the affected joint (knee vs. hip). We received suggestions for additional critical domains from 217 patients and 5 surgeons, prompting the inclusion of 2 research agenda items.
Our study confirmed a consensus rating of the OMERACT TJR core domain set as critical for patients. This broad endorsement should encourage the identification of candidate outcome instruments to further develop a TJR core measurement set that can harmonize reporting in TJR clinical trials.
我们的研究目的是检验利益相关者是否进一步认可关节成形术临床试验结局测量(OMERACT)全关节置换(TJR)工作组提出的核心领域集。
我们向一家高容量关节置换中心的 3810 名髋关节/膝关节置换患者和 49 名关节置换外科医生发送了一份调查,要求他们对每个核心领域(即疼痛、功能、患者满意度、翻修手术、不良事件和死亡)和另外两个领域(即成本和参与度)的重要性进行评分。评分采用 1-9 分制,1-3 分表示患者认为重要性有限或没有,4-6 分表示重要但不是关键,7-9 分表示关键。我们计算了中位数(IQR)值,并使用 Wilcoxon 秩和检验比较了不同性别、年龄和参与者类型的评分。
该问卷由 1295 名患者(34%)和 21 名外科医生(43%)完成。患者未回复者与回复者在年龄(≥55 岁,85.7% vs. 88.6%)、性别(女性,57.5% vs. 57.3%)和关节手术(全髋关节置换,56.9% vs. 63.2%)方面相似。总体而言,所有核心领域和一个非核心领域(即参与度)都被两组利益相关者确认为“关键”。外科医生认为成本仅“重要”但不是“关键”。即使我们按性别、年龄、关节炎类型和受影响关节(膝关节与髋关节)进行分层,所有核心领域的一致性共识仍然存在。我们收到了 217 名患者和 5 名外科医生的其他关键领域建议,这促使我们纳入了 2 个研究议程项目。
我们的研究证实了患者对 OMERACT TJR 核心领域集的一致认可,认为其为关键领域。这种广泛的认可应该鼓励确定候选结局指标,进一步制定 TJR 核心测量集,以协调 TJR 临床试验的报告。