Litcius/Paper detail

Minimal Clinically Important Differences of PROMIS PF in Ankle Fracture Patients

Luke Myhre, Patrick J. Kellam, Graham J. DeKeyser, Haojia Li, Yue Zhang, Amy M. Cizik, Justin M. Haller

2022Foot & Ankle International23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Evaluating the minimal clinically important differences (MCIDs) in patient-reported outcome scores is essential for use of clinical outcomes data. The purpose of the current study was to calculate MCID of Patient Reported Outcome Information System Physical Function (PROMIS PF) scores for ankle fracture patients. METHODS: code. PROMIS PF scores were collected. Patients had to complete an anchor question at 2 time points postoperatively to be included in this study. Anchor-based and distribution-based MCIDs were calculated. RESULTS: A total of 331 patients were included in the distribution-based analysis, and 195 patients were included in the anchor-based analysis. Mean age was 45.3 years (SD 17.5), and 59.4% of participants were female. MCID for PROMIS PF scores was 5.05 in the distribution-based method and 5.43 in the anchor-based method. CONCLUSION: This study identified MCID values based on 2 time points postoperatively for PROMIS PF scores in the ankle fracture population. Both methods of MCID calculation resulted in equivalent MCIDs. This can be used to identify patients outside the normal preoperative and postoperative norms and may help to make clinically relevant practice decisions. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level I, diagnostic study, testing of previously developed diagnostic measure on consecutive patients with reference standard applied.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMinimal clinically important differenceAnkleCurrent Procedural TerminologyPhysical therapyStandard errorSurgeryRandomized controlled trialStatisticsMathematicsBone fractures and treatmentsFoot and Ankle SurgeryKnee injuries and reconstruction techniques