Purpose A statistically significant score change of a PROM (Patient-Reported Outcome Measure) can be questioned if it does not exceed the clinically Minimal Important Change (MIC) or the SDC (Smallest… Click to show full abstract
Purpose A statistically significant score change of a PROM (Patient-Reported Outcome Measure) can be questioned if it does not exceed the clinically Minimal Important Change (MIC) or the SDC (Smallest Detectable Change) of the particular measure. The aim of the study was to define the SDC of three common PROMs in degenerative lumbar spine surgery: Numeric Rating Scale (NRS BACK/LEG ), Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) and Euroqol-5-Dimensions (EQ-5D INDEX ) and to compare them to their MICs. The transition questions Global Assessment (GA BACK/LEG ) were also explored. Methods Reliability analyses were performed on a test–retest population of 182 symptomatically stable patients, with similar characteristics as the Swespine registry population, who underwent surgery for degenerative lumbar spine conditions 2017–2018. The MIC values were based on the entire registry ( n = 98,732) using the ROC curve method. The ICC for absolute agreement was calculated in a two-way random-effects single measures model. For categorical variables, weighted kappa and exact agreement were computed. Results For the NRS, the SDC exceeded the MIC (NRS BACK :3.6 and 2.7; NRS LEG : 3.7 and 3.2, respectively), while they were of an equal size of 18 for the ODI. The gap between the two estimates was remarkable in the EQ-5D INDEX , where SDC was 0.49 and MIC was 0.10. The GA BACK/LEG showed an excellent agreement between the test and the retest occasion. Conclusion For the tested PROM scores, the changes must be considerable in order to distinguish a true change from random error in degenerative lumbar spine surgery research. Graphic abstract These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.
               
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