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大量的最小临床重要差异在肩关节炎置换术结果中存在不一致性和可变性:系统评价。

Substantial Inconsistency and Variability Exists Among Minimum Clinically Important Differences for Shoulder Arthroplasty Outcomes: A Systematic Review.

机构信息

Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY, USA.

Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Tufts Medical Center, Boston, MA, USA.

出版信息

Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2022 Jul 1;480(7):1371-1383. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000002164. Epub 2022 Mar 17.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

As the value of patient-reported outcomes becomes increasingly recognized, minimum clinically important difference (MCID) thresholds have seen greater use in shoulder arthroplasty. However, MCIDs are unique to certain populations, and variation in the modes of calculation in this field may be of concern. With the growing utilization of MCIDs within the field and value-based care models, a detailed appraisal of the appropriateness of MCID use in the literature is necessary and has not been systematically reviewed.

QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: We performed a systematic review of MCID quantification in existing studies on shoulder arthroplasty to answer the following questions: (1) What is the range of values reported for the MCID in commonly used shoulder arthroplasty patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs)? (2) What percentage of studies use previously existing MCIDs versus calculating a new MCID? (3) What techniques for calculating the MCID were used in studies where a new MCID was calculated?

METHODS

The Embase, PubMed, and Ovid/MEDLINE databases were queried from December 2008 through December 2020 for total shoulder arthroplasty and reverse total shoulder arthroplasty articles reporting an MCID value for various PROMs. Two reviewers (DAK, MAM) independently screened articles for eligibility, specifically identifying articles that reported MCID values for PROMs after shoulder arthroplasty, and extracted data for analysis. Each study was classified into two categories: those referencing a previously defined MCID and those using a newly calculated MCID. Methods for determining the MCID for each study and the variability of reported MCIDs for each PROM were recorded. The number of patients, age, gender, BMI, length of follow-up, surgical indications, and surgical type were extracted for each article. Forty-three articles (16,408 patients) with a mean (range) follow-up of 20 months (0.75 to 68) met the inclusion criteria. The median (range) BMI of patients was 29.3 kg/m2 (28.0 to 32.2 kg/m2), and the median (range) age was 68 years (53 to 84). There were 17 unique PROMs with MCID values. Of the 112 MCIDs reported, the most common PROMs with MCIDs were the American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons (ASES) (23% [26 of 112]), the Simple Shoulder Test (SST) (17% [19 of 112]), and the Constant (15% [17 of 112]).

RESULTS

The ranges of MCID values for each PROM varied widely (ASES: 6.3 to 29.5; SST: 1.4 to 4.0; Constant: -0.3 to 12.8). Fifty-six percent (24 of 43) of studies used previously established MCIDs, with 46% (11 of 24) citing one study. Forty-four percent (19 of 43) of studies established new MCIDs, and the most common technique was anchor-based (37% [7 of 19]), followed by distribution (21% [4 of 19]).

CONCLUSION

There is substantial inconsistency and variability in the quantification and reporting of MCID values in shoulder arthroplasty studies. Many shoulder arthroplasty studies apply previously published MCID values with variable ranges of follow-up rather than calculating population-specific thresholds. The use of previously calculated MCIDs may be acceptable in specific situations; however, investigators should select an anchor-based MCID calculated from a patient population as similar as possible to their own. This practice is preferable to the use of distribution-approach MCID methods. Alternatively, authors may consider using substantial clinical benefit or patient-acceptable symptom state to assess outcomes after shoulder arthroplasty.

CLINICAL RELEVANCE

Although MCIDs may provide a useful effect-size based alternative to the traditional p value, care must be taken to use an MCID that is appropriate for the particular patient population being studied.

摘要

背景

随着患者报告结果的价值越来越受到重视,最小临床重要差异(MCID)阈值在肩部关节置换术中得到了更广泛的应用。然而,MCID 是特定人群特有的,并且该领域中计算方法的差异可能值得关注。随着 MCID 在该领域和基于价值的护理模式中的使用不断增加,有必要对文献中 MCID 使用的适当性进行详细评估,但尚未进行系统审查。

问题/目的:我们对现有的肩部关节置换术 MCID 定量研究进行了系统回顾,以回答以下问题:(1)常用肩部关节置换术患者报告结局测量(PROM)中报告的 MCID 值范围是多少?(2)有多少研究使用了先前存在的 MCID 与计算新的 MCID?(3)在计算新 MCID 的研究中,使用了哪些技术?

方法

从 2008 年 12 月至 2020 年 12 月,通过 Embase、PubMed 和 Ovid/MEDLINE 数据库查询了全肩关节置换术和反式全肩关节置换术的文章,这些文章报告了各种 PROM 的 MCID 值。两名审查员(DAK、MAM)独立筛选文章的资格,特别是确定报告肩部关节置换术后 PROM 的 MCID 值的文章,并提取数据进行分析。每个研究分为两类:参考先前定义的 MCID 的研究和使用新计算的 MCID 的研究。记录了为每个研究确定 MCID 的方法和每个 PROM 报告的 MCID 值的可变性。为每个文章提取了患者数量、年龄、性别、BMI、随访时间、手术指征和手术类型等数据。43 篇文章(16408 名患者)的平均(范围)随访时间为 20 个月(0.75 至 68),符合纳入标准。患者的 BMI 中位数(范围)为 29.3kg/m2(28.0 至 32.2kg/m2),中位数(范围)年龄为 68 岁(53 至 84)。有 17 个独特的 PROM 具有 MCID 值。在报告的 112 个 MCIDs 中,最常见的具有 MCIDs 的 PROM 是美国肩肘外科医师学会(ASES)(23%[26 个/112])、简单肩部测试(SST)(17%[19 个/112])和常数(15%[17 个/112])。

结果

每个 PROM 的 MCID 值范围差异很大(ASES:6.3 至 29.5;SST:1.4 至 4.0;常数:-0.3 至 12.8)。56%(24 个/43)的研究使用了先前建立的 MCID,其中 46%(24 个/24)引用了一项研究。44%(19 个/43)的研究建立了新的 MCID,最常见的技术是基于锚的(37%[7 个/19]),其次是分布(21%[4 个/19])。

结论

肩部关节置换术研究中 MCID 值的量化和报告存在很大的不一致性和可变性。许多肩部关节置换术研究应用了先前发表的 MCID 值,其随访范围差异很大,而不是计算特定人群的阈值。在某些情况下,使用先前计算的 MCID 可能是可以接受的;然而,研究人员应该选择尽可能类似于自己患者人群的基于锚的 MCID。这种做法比使用分布方法的 MCID 方法更可取。或者,作者可以考虑使用实质性临床获益或患者可接受的症状状态来评估肩部关节置换术后的结果。

临床意义

虽然 MCID 可能为传统 p 值提供了一种有用的基于效果大小的替代方法,但必须注意使用适用于正在研究的特定患者人群的 MCID。

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