Department of Health Services Research, Faculty of Public Health and Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, 15-17 Tavistock Place, London, WC1H 9SH, UK.
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Qual Life Res. 2018 Jul;27(7):1845-1854. doi: 10.1007/s11136-018-1823-6. Epub 2018 Feb 26.
To investigate the relationship between retrospectively and contemporaneously collected patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) and the influence on this relationship of patients' age and socio-economic status and the length of time.
Patients undergoing hip or knee replacement in four hospitals who had completed a pre-operative questionnaire were invited to recall their pre-operative health status shortly after surgery. The questionnaires included a disease-specific (Oxford Hip Score; Oxford Knee Score) and generic (EQ-5D-3L) PROM. Consistency and absolute agreement between contemporary and retrospective reports were investigated using intraclass correlations (ICCs). Differences were visualised using Bland-Altman plots. Linear regression analysis explored whether retrospective can predict contemporary PROMs.
Patients' recalled health statuses were similar to their contemporaneous reports, with no significant systematic bias. Absolute agreement for disease-specific PROMs was very strong (ICC 0.82) and stronger than for the generic PROM (ICC 0.60, 0.62). Agreement was consistently strong across the range of severity of a patient's condition, age and socio-economic status. Patients' age and socio-economic status had no significant influence on size of difference and direction of recall, although reliability of recall was slightly worse among the over-75s versus under-60s for hips (Oxford Hip Score ICC 0.88 vs. 0.78). Mean retrospective PROMs for groups or populations of patients can reliably predict what mean contemporary reports of PROMs would have been.
Retrospective PROMs can be used to obtain a baseline assessment of health status when contemporary collection is not feasible or cost effective. Research is needed to determine the feasibility of retrospective PROMs in emergency admissions.
调查回顾性和同期收集的患者报告结局测量(PROMs)之间的关系,以及患者年龄、社会经济地位和时间长短对这种关系的影响。
邀请在四家医院接受髋关节或膝关节置换术的患者,在术后不久回忆他们术前的健康状况,这些患者在术前完成了一份问卷。问卷包括特定于疾病的(牛津髋关节评分;牛津膝关节评分)和通用的(EQ-5D-3L)PROM。使用组内相关系数(ICC)研究了同期和回顾性报告之间的一致性和绝对一致性。使用 Bland-Altman 图可视化差异。线性回归分析探讨了回顾性是否可以预测同期的 PROMs。
患者回忆的健康状况与同期报告相似,没有显著的系统偏差。特定于疾病的 PROM 的绝对一致性非常强(ICC 0.82),强于通用 PROM(ICC 0.60、0.62)。在患者病情严重程度、年龄和社会经济地位的整个范围内,一致性始终很强。患者的年龄和社会经济地位对差异的大小和回忆的方向没有显著影响,尽管在 75 岁以上的髋关节患者中,回忆的可靠性略差(牛津髋关节评分 ICC 0.88 与 0.78)。患者群体或人群的回顾性 PROM 平均值可以可靠地预测同期 PROM 平均值的报告。
当同期收集不可行或不具有成本效益时,回顾性 PROM 可用于获得健康状况的基线评估。需要研究在急诊入院的情况下,回顾性 PROM 的可行性。