Litcius/Paper detail

Walking speed and patient‐reported outcomes in young adults with cerebral palsy

Matthew MacCarthy, Patricia Heyn, Alex Tagawa, James Carollo

2022Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology13 citationsDOI

Abstract

Aim To examine the relationship between quantitative gait measurements and self‐reported physical, psychological, cognitive, and social function status in young adults with cerebral palsy (CP). Method Seventy‐two adults with CP (range 18–48y; median age 23y [interquartile range 21–27y]; 34 males, 38 females), in Gross Motor Function Classification System levels I to IV, who previously underwent an instrumented gait analysis (IGA) at our center as children were recruited. Participants underwent a repeated IGA. National Institutes of Health Patient‐Reported Outcomes Information System (PROMIS) instruments including the PROMIS‐57, Applied Cognition – General Concerns (Short Form), and Applied Cognition – Executive Function (Short Form) were administered. Data derived from current and prior IGA were compared via non‐parametric correlation analysis with PROMIS subscores. Results Subscores for anxiety, depression, sleep, and fatigue did not significantly correlate with any IGA data. Walking speed, adjusted for stature, correlated strongly with multiple subscores: physical function ( p <0.001, r s =0.708); participation in social roles ( p =0.007, r s =0.319); executive function ( p =0.005, r s =0.335). Pain interference correlated with longitudinal change in adjusted walking speed ( p =0.032, r s =–0.259). The Applied Cognition – General Concerns (Short Form) correlated with prior absolute walking speed, but not adjusted values. Interpretation This study underscores the importance of walking speed and its association with a variety of functional domains in adults with CP. What this paper adds Patient‐Reported Outcomes Information System measures provide useful clinical data in young adults with cerebral palsy. Temporospatial gait parameters have wide‐reaching functional influence in this population. Walking speed is strongly correlated with physical, social, and executive function.

Topics & Concepts

Cerebral palsyGross Motor Function Classification SystemInterquartile rangePatient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information SystemCognitionPopulationAnxietyPhysical medicine and rehabilitationMedicineGaitPreferred walking speedDepression (economics)PsychologyPhysical therapyClinical psychologyPsychiatryPsychometricsInternal medicineComputerized adaptive testingEnvironmental healthEconomicsMacroeconomicsCerebral Palsy and Movement DisordersBalance, Gait, and Falls PreventionBotulinum Toxin and Related Neurological Disorders