Litcius/Paper detail

Are PROMs passing the message? A reflection with real-life migraine patients

Raquel Gil‐Gouveia, António Gouveia Oliveira

2021Cephalalgia12 citationsDOI

Abstract

Background Several patient-reported outcome measures are available to monitor headache impact, but are those reliable in real-life clinical practice? Methods Two identical patient-reported outcome measures (HALT-90 and MIDAS) were applied simultaneously in each clinical visit to a series of patients treated with monoclonal antibodies for migraine and intra-individual agreement was evaluated using the intraclass correlation coefficients. Results Our sample included 92 patients, 92.4% females, 45 years old on average. Moderate (0.50 to 0.75) and even poor (<0.50) ICC were observed in all but the first item of these patient-reported outcome measures in at least one evaluation. Over time, missing data were more frequent and no learning effect was detected. Discussion We observed intra-personal variation in reliability when answering patient-reported outcome measures, persisting in repeated applications, and a decrease in the motivation to respond, which should alert clinicians for these additional challenges in real-life clinical practice.

Topics & Concepts

Intraclass correlationMedicinePatient-reported outcomeMigraineReliability (semiconductor)Clinical PracticePhysical therapyCorrelationOutcome (game theory)Quality of life (healthcare)Internal medicineClinical psychologyPsychometricsNursingPower (physics)MathematicsQuantum mechanicsPhysicsMathematical economicsGeometryMigraine and Headache StudiesSuicide and Self-Harm StudiesTrigeminal Neuralgia and Treatments