Stephens Andrew R, Bender Nicholas R, El-Hassan Ramzi, Patel Rajeev K
University of Rochester Medical Center, 601 Elmwood Avenue, Rochester, NY, 14623, United States of America.
Interv Pain Med. 2025 May 9;4(2):100588. doi: 10.1016/j.inpm.2025.100588. eCollection 2025 Jun.
Patient-reported outcome measurement instrument surveys (PROMIS) have been increasingly used to assess clinical outcomes following a variety of medical procedures. Despite their value in evaluating patient functional status, response rates to these surveys remain low. Understanding differences in demographics between responders and non-responders to PROMIS may be beneficial to improving generalizability and response rates.
The primary aim of this study was to compare demographic characteristics between patients who respond to PROMIS surveys and those who do not, hypothesizing no significant differences between these groups.
Adult new patient visits from 2018 to 2022 in Department of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation outpatient clinics at a single academic medical center were analyzed. Patients completed PROMIS surveys (physical function, pain interference, and depression) on iPads at each clinic visit. Demographic variables such as gender, race, BMI, smoking status, employment status, marital status, and Area Deprivation Index (ADI) were collected. Univariate and multivariate analyses were conducted to assess for variables associated with an increased likelihood of responding to PROMIS surveys.
A total of 29,830 patients were included in this study. Of the total patient cohort, 8331 (27.9 %) responded to the PROMIS surveys. Significant demographic differences were found between responders and non-responders. Patients in the least deprived ADI quartile were more likely to respond compared to those in the most deprived quartile (33.5 % vs 23.7 %, p < 0.001). Employed patients, white patients, non-smokers and married individuals were more likely to respond. On multivariate analysis, unemployment (OR 0.71, p = 0.006), increased BMI (OR 0.93, p = 0.014), and higher ADI (OR 0.94, p = 0.003) were significantly associated with lower response rates.
PROMIS response rates are influenced by patient demographics, with lower response rates observed in unemployed, non-white, and socioeconomically deprived populations. These findings highlight the need for targeted interventions to increase response rates and ensure equitable data collection in PROMIS surveys to enhancing the generalizability of clinical decisions made using PROMIS data.
患者报告结局测量工具调查(PROMIS)已越来越多地用于评估各种医疗程序后的临床结局。尽管它们在评估患者功能状态方面具有价值,但这些调查的回应率仍然很低。了解PROMIS调查的回应者和非回应者在人口统计学上的差异可能有助于提高普遍性和回应率。
本研究的主要目的是比较回应PROMIS调查的患者和不回应的患者之间的人口统计学特征,假设这些组之间没有显著差异。
分析了2018年至2022年在一个学术医疗中心物理医学与康复门诊的成年新患者就诊情况。患者在每次门诊就诊时通过iPad完成PROMIS调查(身体功能、疼痛干扰和抑郁)。收集了人口统计学变量,如性别、种族、体重指数、吸烟状况、就业状况、婚姻状况和地区贫困指数(ADI)。进行单变量和多变量分析以评估与回应PROMIS调查可能性增加相关的变量。
本研究共纳入29,830名患者。在整个患者队列中,8331名(27.9%)回应了PROMIS调查。在回应者和非回应者之间发现了显著的人口统计学差异。与最贫困四分位数的患者相比,ADI最低贫困四分位数的患者更有可能回应(33.5%对23.7%,p<0.001)。就业患者、白人患者、非吸烟者和已婚个体更有可能回应。在多变量分析中,失业(OR 0.71,p = 0.006)、体重指数增加(OR 0.93,p = 0.014)和较高的ADI(OR 0.94,p = 0.003)与较低的回应率显著相关。
PROMIS回应率受患者人口统计学影响,失业、非白人以及社会经济贫困人群的回应率较低。这些发现凸显了需要有针对性的干预措施来提高回应率,并确保在PROMIS调查中公平收集数据,以提高使用PROMIS数据做出的临床决策的普遍性。