Lau Brian C, Hutyra Carolyn A, Streufert Benjamin, Reed Shelby D, Orlando Lori A, Huber Joel C, Taylor Dean C, Mather Richard C
Duke Sport Science Institute, Division of Sports Medicine, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Comprehensive Outcomes in Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation Data System, Duke Practice Transformation Unit, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Orthop J Sports Med. 2020 Dec 4;8(12):2325967120966145. doi: 10.1177/2325967120966145. eCollection 2020 Dec.
Treatment of a first-time anterior shoulder dislocation (FTASD) is sensitive to patient preferences. The operative or nonoperative management debate provides an excellent opportunity to learn how surgeons apply patient preferences in treatment decisions.
To determine how patient preferences (repeat dislocation risk, recovery difficulties, fear of surgery, treatment costs) and surgeon factors influence a surgeon's treatment plan for FTASD.
Cross-sectional study.
Eight clinical vignettes of hypothetical patients with FTASD (including age, sex, and activity level) were presented to members of the Magellan Society. A second set of matched vignettes with patient preferences and clinical variables were also presented. The vignettes represented scenarios in which evidence does not favor one treatment over another. Respondents were asked how they would manage each hypothetical case. Respondents also estimated the risk of redislocation for the nonoperative cases for comparison with the published rates. Finally, respondents completed a Likert-scale questionnaire to determine their perceptions on factors influencing their decisions.
A total of 103 orthopaedic surgeons completed the survey; 48% practiced in an academic hospital; 79% were in practice for 10 years or longer; and 75% had completed a sports medicine fellowship. Patient preferences were the single most important factor influencing treatment recommendation, with activity type and age also important. Just 62% of the surgeon estimates of the risk of redislocation were consistent with the published rates. The inclusion of patient preferences to clinical variables changed treatment recommendations in 62.5% of our hypothetical cases. Respondents rated patient treatment preference as the leading factor in their treatment decision making.
Patient preferences were important when deciding the appropriate treatment for FTASD. Respondents were inconsistent when applying evidence in their decision making and estimates of recurrent instability. Decision support tools that deliver patient preferences and personalized evidence-based outcome estimates improve the quality of decision making at the point of care.
首次前肩关节脱位(FTASD)的治疗对患者偏好较为敏感。手术或非手术治疗的争论为了解外科医生如何在治疗决策中应用患者偏好提供了绝佳机会。
确定患者偏好(再次脱位风险、恢复困难程度、对手术的恐惧、治疗费用)和外科医生因素如何影响外科医生对FTASD的治疗方案。
横断面研究。
向麦哲伦协会成员展示了8个FTASD假设患者的临床病例(包括年龄、性别和活动水平)。还展示了第二组包含患者偏好和临床变量的匹配病例。这些病例代表了证据不倾向于一种治疗优于另一种治疗的情况。询问受访者他们将如何处理每个假设病例。受访者还估计了非手术病例的再次脱位风险,以便与已发表的发生率进行比较。最后,受访者完成了一份李克特量表问卷,以确定他们对影响其决策因素的看法。
共有103名骨科医生完成了调查;48%在学术医院执业;79%从业10年或更长时间;75%完成了运动医学进修。患者偏好是影响治疗建议的最重要单一因素,活动类型和年龄也很重要。外科医生对再次脱位风险的估计中只有62%与已发表的发生率一致。将患者偏好纳入临床变量后,在我们62.5%的假设病例中改变了治疗建议。受访者将患者治疗偏好评为其治疗决策的首要因素。
在决定FTASD的适当治疗时,患者偏好很重要。受访者在决策和复发性不稳定估计中应用证据时不一致。提供患者偏好和个性化循证结果估计的决策支持工具可提高医疗点的决策质量。