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在临床实践中,常规向医疗保健提供者和患者提供来自患者报告的结局测量的反馈。

Routine provision of feedback from patient-reported outcome measurements to healthcare providers and patients in clinical practice.

机构信息

Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.

Health Services & Policy Research, University of Exeter Medical School, Exeter, UK.

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2021 Oct 12;10(10):CD011589. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011589.pub2.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Patient-reported outcomes measures (PROMs) assess a patient's subjective appraisal of health outcomes from their own perspective. Despite hypothesised benefits that feedback  on PROMs can support decision-making in clinical practice and improve outcomes, there is uncertainty surrounding the effectiveness of PROMs feedback.

OBJECTIVES

To assess the effects of PROMs feedback to patients, or healthcare workers, or both on patient-reported health outcomes and processes of care.

SEARCH METHODS

We searched MEDLINE, Embase, CENTRAL, two other databases and two clinical trial registries on 5 October 2020. We searched grey literature and consulted experts in the field.

SELECTION CRITERIA

Two review authors independently screened and selected studies for inclusion. We included randomised trials directly comparing the effects on outcomes and processes of care of PROMs feedback to healthcare professionals and patients, or both with the impact of not providing such information.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

Two groups of two authors independently extracted data from the included studies and evaluated study quality. We followed standard methodological procedures expected by Cochrane and EPOC. We used the GRADE approach to assess the certainty of the evidence. We conducted meta-analyses of the results where possible.

MAIN RESULTS

We identified 116 randomised trials which assessed the effectiveness of PROMs feedback in improving processes or outcomes of care, or both in a broad range of disciplines including psychiatry, primary care, and oncology. Studies were conducted across diverse ambulatory primary and secondary care settings in North America, Europe and Australasia. A total of 49,785 patients were included across all the studies. The certainty of the evidence varied between very low and moderate. Many of the studies included in the review were at risk of performance and detection bias. The evidence suggests moderate certainty that PROMs feedback probably improves quality of life (standardised mean difference (SMD) 0.15, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.05 to 0.26; 11 studies; 2687 participants), and leads to an increase in patient-physician communication (SMD 0.36, 95% CI 0.21 to 0.52; 5 studies; 658 participants), diagnosis and notation (risk ratio (RR) 1.73, 95% CI 1.44 to 2.08; 21 studies; 7223 participants), and disease control (RR 1.25, 95% CI 1.10 to 1.41; 14 studies; 2806 participants). The intervention probably makes little or no difference for general health perceptions (SMD 0.04, 95% CI -0.17 to 0.24; 2 studies, 552 participants; low-certainty evidence), social functioning (SMD 0.02, 95% CI -0.06 to 0.09; 15 studies; 2632 participants; moderate-certainty evidence), and pain (SMD 0.00, 95% CI -0.09 to 0.08; 9 studies; 2386 participants; moderate-certainty evidence). We are uncertain about the effect of PROMs feedback on physical functioning (14 studies; 2788 participants) and mental functioning (34 studies; 7782 participants), as well as fatigue (4 studies; 741 participants), as the certainty of the evidence was very low. We did not find studies reporting on adverse effects defined as distress following or related to PROM completion.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: PROM feedback probably produces moderate improvements in communication between healthcare professionals and patients as well as in diagnosis and notation, and disease control, and small improvements to quality of life. Our confidence in the effects is limited by the risk of bias, heterogeneity and small number of trials conducted to assess outcomes of interest. It is unclear whether   many of these improvements are clinically meaningful or sustainable in the long term. There is a need for more high-quality studies in this area, particularly studies which employ cluster designs and utilise techniques to maintain allocation concealment.

摘要

背景

患者报告结局测量(PROMs)从患者自身角度评估患者对健康结局的主观评价。尽管假设反馈 PROMs 可以支持临床实践中的决策并改善结局,但关于 PROMs 反馈的有效性存在不确定性。

目的

评估将 PROMs 反馈给患者或医疗保健工作者或两者对患者报告的健康结局和护理过程的影响。

检索方法

我们于 2020 年 10 月 5 日在 MEDLINE、Embase、CENTRAL、另外两个数据库和两个临床试验注册库中进行了检索。我们检索了灰色文献并咨询了该领域的专家。

选择标准

两位综述作者独立筛选和选择纳入研究。我们纳入了直接比较反馈 PROMs 对医疗保健专业人员和患者或两者的影响与不提供此类信息的影响的随机试验。

数据收集和分析

两组两名作者独立从纳入研究中提取数据并评估研究质量。我们遵循了 Cochrane 和 EPOC 预期的标准方法学程序。我们使用 GRADE 方法评估证据的确定性。在可能的情况下,我们进行了结果的荟萃分析。

主要结果

我们确定了 116 项随机试验,这些试验评估了在广泛的学科领域(包括精神病学、初级保健和肿瘤学)中,反馈 PROMs 在改善护理过程或结局或两者方面的有效性。研究在北美、欧洲和澳大拉西亚的各种门诊初级和二级保健环境中进行。所有研究共纳入 49785 名患者。证据的确定性在极低和中等之间有所不同。许多纳入的研究存在绩效和检测偏倚的风险。证据表明,中等确定性,反馈 PROMs 可能会改善生活质量(标准化均数差(SMD)0.15,95%置信区间(CI)0.05 至 0.26;11 项研究;2687 名参与者),并增加患者-医生沟通(SMD 0.36,95%CI 0.21 至 0.52;5 项研究;658 名参与者)、诊断和记录(风险比(RR)1.73,95%CI 1.44 至 2.08;21 项研究;7223 名参与者)和疾病控制(RR 1.25,95%CI 1.10 至 1.41;14 项研究;2806 名参与者)。该干预措施可能对一般健康感知(SMD 0.04,95%CI -0.17 至 0.24;2 项研究,552 名参与者;低确定性证据)、社会功能(SMD 0.02,95%CI -0.06 至 0.09;15 项研究;2632 名参与者;中等确定性证据)和疼痛(SMD 0.00,95%CI -0.09 至 0.08;9 项研究;2386 名参与者;中等确定性证据)没有影响。我们不确定反馈 PROMs 对身体功能(14 项研究;2788 名参与者)和心理功能(34 项研究;7782 名参与者)以及疲劳(4 项研究;741 名参与者)的影响,因为证据的确定性非常低。我们没有发现报告与完成 PROMs 相关或相关的困扰有关的不良影响的研究。

作者结论

反馈 PROMs 可能会适度改善医患沟通以及诊断和记录,并改善疾病控制,同时适度改善生活质量。我们对这些影响的信心受到偏倚、异质性和评估感兴趣的结局的试验数量有限的限制。目前尚不清楚这些改善中有多少在临床上是有意义的或长期可持续的。在这一领域需要更多的高质量研究,特别是采用聚类设计并利用技术来保持分配隐蔽性的研究。

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