Orr Melissa N, Klika Alison K, Emara Ahmed K, Piuzzi Nicolas S
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH.
J Arthroplasty. 2022 Jun;37(6S):S110-S120.e5. doi: 10.1016/j.arth.2022.02.090. Epub 2022 Feb 28.
Value-driven healthcare models prioritize patient-perceived benefits to quantify the quality of care through patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs). The Patient Acceptable Symptom State (PASS) is the highest level of symptom beyond which a patient considers his/her condition satisfactory. We identified preoperative phenotypes of PROMs associated with not achieving PASS at 1 year following total knee arthroplasty (TKA) and explored the relationships between such phenotypes with hospital utilization parameters.
A prospective institutional cohort of 5,274 primary TKAs for osteoarthritis from 2016 to 2019 with 1-year follow-up were included. Preoperative scores on Knee Disability and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) Pain, KOOS-Physical function Short form (PS), and Veterans RAND 12-Item Health Survey (VR-12) Mental Component Summary (MCS) were used to develop patient phenotypes. Associations between preoperative "phenotype" and 1-year PASS, discharge disposition, length of stay, 90-day readmission, and 1-year reoperation were evaluated using multivariate regression.
In total, 16.3% (n = 862) of patients reported their state as "not acceptable" at 1 year. A combination of low scores in each of the presently examined PROMs was associated with the highest odds of 1-year dissatisfaction (odds ratio 2.18, 95% confidence interval 1.74-2.74). The PROM phenotypes were the greatest drivers compared to sociodemographic variables in predicting satisfaction. Combinations of low scores in VR-12 MCS and KOOS-PS were significantly associated with both non-home discharge status and prolonged length of stay.
Patients with combined lower preoperative scores across multiple PROMs (KOOS-Pain <41.7, KOOS-PS <51.5, and VR-12 MCS <52.8) have increased odds of dissatisfaction after TKA. Measuring pain, function, and mental health concurrently as phenotypes may help identify TKA patients at risk for not achieving a satisfactory outcome at 1 year.
价值驱动的医疗保健模式将患者感知的益处作为优先事项,通过患者报告结局指标(PROMs)来量化医疗质量。患者可接受症状状态(PASS)是症状的最高水平,超过此水平患者认为其病情令人满意。我们确定了全膝关节置换术(TKA)后1年未达到PASS的PROMs术前表型,并探讨了这些表型与医院利用参数之间的关系。
纳入2016年至2019年5274例因骨关节炎接受初次TKA且随访1年的前瞻性机构队列研究。使用膝关节残疾和骨关节炎结局评分(KOOS)疼痛、KOOS身体功能简表(PS)以及退伍军人兰德12项健康调查(VR-12)心理成分总结(MCS)的术前评分来确定患者表型。采用多因素回归评估术前“表型”与1年PASS、出院处置、住院时间、90天再入院和1年再次手术之间的关联。
共有16.3%(n = 862)的患者在1年时报告其状态为“不可接受”。目前检查的每个PROMs得分低的组合与1年不满意的最高几率相关(比值比2.18,95%置信区间1.74 - 2.74)。与社会人口统计学变量相比,PROMs表型在预测满意度方面是最大的驱动因素。VR-12 MCS和KOOS-PS得分低的组合与非家庭出院状态和住院时间延长均显著相关。
多个PROMs术前综合得分较低(KOOS疼痛<41.7、KOOS-PS<51.5和VR-12 MCS<52.8)的患者TKA后不满意几率增加。将疼痛、功能和心理健康同时作为表型进行测量可能有助于识别TKA术后1年未获得满意结局风险的患者。