Davey A F, Coombes J, Porter I, Green C, Mewse A J, Valderas J M
Health Services and Policy Research Group, Exeter Collaboration for Academic Primary Care, NIHR PenARC, University of Exeter Medical School, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK.
Exeter Collaboration for Academic Primary Care (APEx), University of Exeter Medical School, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK.
J Patient Rep Outcomes. 2021 Nov 4;5(1):117. doi: 10.1186/s41687-021-00395-x.
Although circadian, seasonal, and other cycles have been observed for a number of chronic conditions, their impact on patient reported outcomes measurements (PROMs) has not been systematically explored, rendering our understanding of the effect of time of measurement on PROM scores very limited. The aim was to conduct a scoping review to determine what is known about how intra-individual cyclical variation might affect the way individuals with chronic conditions respond to patient-reported outcome measures.
A protocol of a systematic scoping review was registered on PROSPERO (CRD42017058365). We developed a search strategy based on previous relevant reviews and implemented it in: MEDLINE, Embase, PsycINFO, and CINAHL. No restrictions were placed on article types and backward and forward citation searches were conducted. Screening and data extraction were independently completed by up to four reviewers. An adapted version of CASP criteria was used to appraise the quality of included articles. Concepts that were important in understanding the impact of cyclical variation on PROM scores were elicited from the papers and iteratively refined through discussion amongst the authors.
2420 references resulted from the searches, with 33 articles meeting the inclusion criteria. Most study designs included observational research (particularly ecological momentary assessment), 2 were RCTs and 2 were systematic reviews. Studies mainly focused on specific health conditions: mental health, respiratory and musculoskeletal. There was a lack of qualitative research and theoretical framework to explore these concepts more fully. Five overarching concepts emerged: variation in outcomes, variation of scores, psychological status, individual factors, and environmental/situational factors. A conceptual model was developed outlining the relationships between these concepts.
There is empirical evidence that supports cyclical variation in PROM scores across different chronic conditions, with potential very significant implications for administration and interpretation of PROMs. The proposed conceptual model can support further research in this area.
尽管已观察到许多慢性病存在昼夜节律、季节节律及其他周期变化,但其对患者报告结局测量(PROMs)的影响尚未得到系统探究,这使得我们对测量时间对PROM分数的影响的理解非常有限。目的是进行一项范围综述,以确定关于个体内部周期性变化如何影响慢性病患者对患者报告结局测量的反应方式的已知情况。
在PROSPERO(CRD42017058365)上注册了一项系统范围综述的方案。我们根据先前的相关综述制定了检索策略,并在MEDLINE、Embase、PsycINFO和CINAHL中实施。对文章类型不设限制,并进行了前后向引文检索。筛选和数据提取由多达四名评审员独立完成。使用改编版的CASP标准评估纳入文章的质量。从论文中提炼出对理解周期性变化对PROM分数的影响很重要的概念,并通过作者之间的讨论进行迭代完善。
检索得到2420篇参考文献,其中33篇文章符合纳入标准。大多数研究设计包括观察性研究(特别是生态瞬时评估),2项为随机对照试验,2项为系统综述。研究主要集中在特定的健康状况:心理健康、呼吸和肌肉骨骼方面。缺乏更全面探索这些概念的定性研究和理论框架。出现了五个总体概念:结局变化、分数变化、心理状态、个体因素以及环境/情境因素。开发了一个概念模型,概述了这些概念之间的关系。
有经验证据支持不同慢性病的PROM分数存在周期性变化,这对PROMs的管理和解释可能具有非常重大的意义。提出的概念模型可以支持该领域的进一步研究。