Department of Anesthesia & Pain Management, University Health Network, University of Toronto, Toronto Western Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Anaesthesia and Perioperative Medicine, Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.
Reg Anesth Pain Med. 2020 Dec;45(12):1000-1005. doi: 10.1136/rapm-2020-101670. Epub 2020 Sep 7.
In the field of acute pain medicine research, we believe there is an unmet need to incorporate patient related outcome measures that move beyond reporting pain scores and opioid consumption. The term "minimal clinically important difference" (MCID) defines the clinical benefit of an intervention as perceived by the patient, as opposed to a mathematically determined statistically significant difference that may not necessarily be clinically significant. The present article reviews the concept of MCID in acute postoperative pain research, addresses potential pitfalls in MCID determination and questions the clinical validity of extrapolating MCID determined from chronic pain and non-surgical pain studies to the acute postoperative pain setting. We further suggest the concepts of minimal clinically important improvement, substantial clinical benefit and patient acceptable symptom state should also represent aspirational outcomes for future research in acute postoperative pain management.
在急性疼痛医学研究领域,我们认为有未满足的需求,需要纳入超越疼痛评分和阿片类药物消耗报告的患者相关结局测量。“最小临床重要差异”(MCID)这个术语定义了患者感知到的干预措施的临床获益,而不是数学上确定的统计学显著差异,后者可能不一定具有临床意义。本文回顾了 MCID 在急性术后疼痛研究中的概念,讨论了 MCID 确定中的潜在陷阱,并对将从慢性疼痛和非手术性疼痛研究中确定的 MCID 推断到急性术后疼痛环境的临床有效性提出了质疑。我们还建议,最小临床重要改善、实质性临床获益和患者可接受的症状状态等概念也应代表急性术后疼痛管理未来研究的理想结果。