| Literature DB >> 26430599 |
Daniel J Ellis1, Scott S Mallozzi2, Jacob E Mathews1, Isaac L Moss2, Jean A Ouellet1, Peter Jarzem1, Michael H Weber1.
Abstract
Study Design Systematic review. Objective To examine the relationship between the patient's preoperative expectations and short-term postoperative satisfaction and functional outcome in lumbar spine surgery. Methods The Medline, Embase, and Cochrane databases were queried using a predefined search algorithm to identify all lumbar spine studies analyzing the influence of preoperative expectations on postoperative satisfaction and functional outcome. Two independent reviewers and a third independent mediator reviewed the literature and performed study screening, selection, methodological assessment, and data extraction using an objective protocol. Results Of 444 studies identified, 13 met the inclusion criteria. Methodological quality scores ranged from 59 to 100% with the greatest variability in defining patient characteristics and the methods of assessing patient expectations. Patient expectations were assessed in 22 areas, most frequently back and leg pain expectations and general expectations. Functional outcome was assessed by 13 tools; the most common were the visual analog scale, Oswestry Disability Index (ODI), and Short Form Health Survey (SF-36). Positive expectations for symptomatology, activity, general health, and recovery correlated with satisfaction. General expectations correlated with higher SF-36 Physical Subcomponent scores, better global function, and lower ODI outcome. Conclusions on the influence of the expectations for pain were limited due to the study heterogeneity, but the evidence suggests a positive correlation between the expectation and outcome for back and leg pain. Conclusions Positive expectations correlated significantly with short-term postoperative satisfaction and functional outcome, including higher SF-36 scores, earlier return to work, and decreased ODI scores. Future expectation-based investigations will benefit from implementation of the standardized methods of expectation, satisfaction, and outcome analysis discussed herein.Entities:
Keywords: expectations; functional outcome; patient counseling; quality assessment; satisfaction; spine surgery
Year: 2015 PMID: 26430599 PMCID: PMC4577329 DOI: 10.1055/s-0035-1551650
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Spine J ISSN: 2192-5682
Medline database query conducted November 15, 2014
| Line | Query | Results |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | exp Spine | 70,392 |
| 2 | exp Back | 8,631 |
| 3 | exp Spinal Diseases | 50,848 |
| 4 | exp Sciatica | 1,716 |
| 5 | exp Radiculopathy | 2,868 |
| 6 | Cervical Spine.mp. | 10,979 |
| 7 | Thoracic Spine.mp. | 3,041 |
| 8 | Thoracolumbar Spine.mp. | 1,081 |
| 9 | Thoracolumbar vertebrae.mp. | 90 |
| 10 | Lumbar.mp. | 61,906 |
| 11 | Surgery.mp. | 618,344 |
| 12 | Procedure.mp. | 371,150 |
| 13 | Operation.mp. | 166,415 |
| 14 | exp Orthopaedic Procedures | 145,328 |
| 15 | Expectation.mp. | 34,030 |
| 16 | Expectations.mp. | 34,030 |
| 17 | 1 or 2 or 3 or 4 or 5 or 6 or 7 or 8 or 9 or 10 | 134,875 |
| 18 | 11 or 12 or 13 or 14 | 1,096,651 |
| 19 | 15 or 16 | 47,782 |
| 20 | 17 and 18 and 19 | 166 |
Methodological assessment questionnaire applied to each study included in the review
| Study population |
| 1. Is the source population adequately described (primarily in terms of indication and operation)? |
| 2. Is it clear how participants are recruited (consecutive, random, or selective sample)? |
| 3. Are inclusion and exclusion criteria described? |
| 4. Is the chance of selection bias small (is the study population an adequate representation of the source population)? |
| 5. Are at least five key baseline characteristics of the study population reported (e.g., gender, age, type of operation, indication for operation, litigation status, worker's compensation status)? |
| Measurement of determinant |
| 6. Is there a clear definition or description of the type of expectations measured? |
| 7. Is it clear how expectations are measured (questionnaire/interview, number of items, continuous/ordinal/dichotomous)? |
| 8. Are the majority of expectations evaluated on three or more categories (e.g., leg pain, back pain, return to work)? |
| 9. Are individual categories evaluated on a scale of 3 or more (e.g., dichotomous versus 5-point Likert scale)? |
| 10. Is the evaluator independent of the surgeon? |
| 11. Are disclosures revealed (e.g., financial conflict of interest)? |
| Outcome measurement |
| 12. Is it clear how the functional outcome is measured (questionnaire/interview/functional assessment, number of items, continuous/ordinal/dichotomous)? |
| 13. Is it clear how satisfaction is measured (questionnaire/interview, number of items, continuous/ordinal/dichotomous)? |
| 14. Is the follow-up rate adequate (>80% is adequate)? |
| 15. Is it plausible that there is no selective dropout during follow-up? |
| Confounding measurement and account |
| 16. Are confounding variables identified? |
| 17. Are appropriate methods used to account for the confounders in the analyses? |
| Analysis |
| 18. Is an appropriate statistical method used for the analyses? |
Criterion were assigned values of either positive (criteria fulfilled), negative (criteria not fulfilled), not applicable (NA), or unknown (Unk). The questionnaire was adapted from Hayden JA, Côté P, Bombardier C. Evaluation of the quality of prognosis studies in systematic reviews. Ann Intern Med 2006;144(6):427–437,15 and Haanstra TM, van den Berg T, Ostelo RW et al. Systematic review: do patient expectations influence treatment outcomes in total knee and total hip arthroplasty? Health Qual Life Outcomes 2012;10:152.14
Fig. 1Flowchart of study selection.
Study characteristics
| Study (level of evidence | Patients at follow-up/enrolled (% follow-up) | Follow-up | Intervention | Expectation assessment tool | Timing expectation measurement | Satisfaction assessment tool | Outcome assessment tool |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| de Groot et al | 107/120 (89%) | 3 mo | Lumbar diskectomy ( | 2 items (5-point scale): rate of recovery, return to work; 2 items (4-point scale): leg pain, back pain | Day prior to operation | 10 item (4-point scale): symptoms disappeared, day after surgery, decision to operate, disappointment with operation, feel better than preoperative, fulfilled wishes for operation, operation turned out badly, satisfaction with operation, more complaints than expected, operation exceeded expectations | 2 items (0–100 VAS): leg pain, back pain |
| Gepstein et al | 298/367 (81%) | 42 mo (0–10 y) | Lumbar decompression (level not reported) | 1 item (2-point scale): preoperative expectations | Preoperatively (not otherwise specified) | 1 item (4-point scale): satisfaction | Barthel Index; walking distance |
| Iversen et al | 228/257 (89%) | 6 mo | Lumbar decompression: single level ( | 4 items (2 point scale): pain relief, physical function (walking capacity), social role, independence; 2 items (open-ended): list ways life will be improved, activities expected to perform but currently unable; 1 item (5-point scale): recovery time | Preoperatively (not otherwise specified) | 2 items (4-point scale): pain relief, physical function (walking capacity) | Mental health index; Sickness Impact Profile; Zung Depression Scale; 4 items (4-point Likert): walking capacity scale; 1 item (6-point scale): level of pain |
| Johansson et al | 55/59 (93%) | 12 mo | Lumbar disk | 1 item (10-point scale): expectation to work in 3 mo | 7–14 d preoperatively | Not assessed | EuroQol 5D; Oswestry Disability Index; 2 items (VAS): leg pain, back pain |
| Licina et al | 145/145 (100%) | 6 mo | Lumbar single-level diskectomy ( | 3 items: value least acceptable to be satisfied; Oswestry Disability Index; back pain (0–10 VAS); leg pain (0–10 VAS) | Preoperatively (not otherwise specified) | 1 item (5-point Likert): general satisfaction | Oswestry Disability Index; 2 items (0–10 VAS): leg pain, back pain |
| Lutz et al | 183/273 (67%) | 12 mo | Lumbar diskectomy | 2 items (5-point scale): expected recovery time, desirability of surgery; 1 item (3-point scale): expected health state postoperatively | Preoperatively (not otherwise specified) | 4 items (7-point scale): leg pain, leg/foot/groin numbness/tingling, leg/foot weakness, back/leg pain with sitting; 1 item (5-point scale): satisfaction remaining at current symptoms | Roland-Morris disability scale; SF-36 |
| Mannion et al | 2 mo 100/100 (100%); 12 mo 96/100 (96%) | 2 mo; 12 mo | Lumbar decompression (level not reported) fusion ( | Modified NASS Lumbar Spine Questionnaire; 8 items (5-point Likert): leg pain, back pain, walking capacity, independence in activities, general physical capacity; sports, social contacts; mental well-being | Preoperatively (not otherwise specified) | 8 items (5-point scale): leg pain, back pain, walking capacity, independence, sport, general function, social function, mental well-being; 1 item: most important symptom change; 1 item (3-point scale): general meeting expectation; 1 item (5-point scale): global effectiveness of operation | Roland-Morris disability scale |
| McGregor and Hughes | 6 wk 72/77 (94%); 6 mo 68/77 (88%); 12 mo 65/77 (77%) | 6 wk; 6 mo; 12 mo | Lumbar decompression unilateral ( | Cantril Life Satisfaction Scale; Oswestry Disability Index; SF-36; 7 items (5-point Likert): function, general health, pain, life satisfaction, general satisfaction, confidence in outcome, importance of outcome; 2 items (0–100 VAS): leg pain, back pain | 6 wk preoperatively | 4 items (5-point Likert): general improvement, pain, function, life satisfaction; 3 items (0–100 VAS): satisfaction with operation, achieved pre-operative goal, decision for operation | Cantril Life Satisfaction; Oswestry Disability Index; SF-36; 2 items (0–100 VAS): leg pain, back pain |
| McGregor et al | 6 wk 245/338 (72%); 6 mo 233/338 (69%); 12 mo 293/338 (87%) | 6 wk; 6 mo; 12 mo | Lumbar diskectomy lumbar decompression | 3 items (0–100 VAS): leg pain, back pain, state of health | Preoperatively (not otherwise specified) | 3 items (0–100 VAS): leg pain, back pain, state of health | EuroQol 5D; 3 items (0–100 VAS): leg pain, back pain, state of health |
| Rönnberg et al | 148/172 (86%) | 24 mo | Lumbar single-level diskectomy | 5 items (3-point continuum): leg pain, back pain, sensibility, muscle function, return to work | Preoperatively (not otherwise specified) | 1 item (3-point scale): global satisfaction | Macnab classification; 4 items (3-point continuum): leg pain, back pain, sensibility, muscle function; 1 item (2-point scale): work status |
| Cobo Soriano et al | 184/203 (91%) | 12 mo | Lumbar decompression and fusion single level ( | 1 item (open-ended): symptom relief | Preoperatively (not otherwise specified) | 1 item: satisfaction with results no specific information available) | Oswestry Disability Index; SF-36; 2 items (0–100 VAS): leg pain, back pain |
| Toyone et al | 98/100 (98%) | 24 mo | Lumbar diskectomy ( | 5 items (4-point scale): leg pain, leg numbness, low back pain, walking, activities of daily living; 2 items (0–100 VAS): success of surgery, lumbar complications | Preoperatively (not otherwise specified) | 1 item (4-point scale): satisfaction with surgery | Roland-Morris disability scale; SF-12; 5 items (0–100 VAS): leg pain, leg numbness, low back pain, walking ability, activity of daily living |
| Yee et al | 143/155 (92%) | Decompress 6 mo; fusion 12 mo | Lumbar decompression: single level ( | 7 items (6-point scale): back pain, leg pain, numbness/weakness/instability, household activities, sleep comfort, return to work/activities of daily living, recreational activities | 1 wk preoperatively | 7 items (5-point scale): back pain, leg pain, numbness/weakness/instability, household activities, sleep comfort, return to work/activities daily living, recreational activities | Oswestry Disability Index; SF-36 |
Abbreviations: ALIF, anterior lumbar interbody fusion; ODI, Oswestry Disability Index; SF-12, Short Form Health Survey 12; SF-36, Short Form Health Survey 36; TLIF, transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion; VAS, visual analog scale.
The study population was part of a larger randomized control study.
Methodological assessment
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | Total score | Total score (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| de Groot et al | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | − | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | 17/18 | 94 |
| Gepstein et al | + | + | − | + | + | − | + | − | − | Unk | − | + | + | + | + | − | − | + | 10/17 | 59 |
| Iversen et al | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | − | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | 17/18 | 94 |
| Johansson et al | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | − | + | + | + | + | NA | + | + | + | + | + | 16/17 | 94 |
| Licina et al | + | + | + | − | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | − | − | − | 14/18 | 78 |
| Lutz et al | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | Unk | + | + | + | − | − | + | + | + | 15/17 | 88 |
| Mannion et al | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | 16/18 | 89 |
| McGregor and Hughes | + | + | + | + | − | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | 17/18 | 94 |
| McGregor et al | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | Unk | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | 17/17 | 100 |
| Rönnberg et al | + | + | + | + | − | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | − | − | + | 15/18 | 83 |
| Cobo Soriano et al | + | + | + | + | + | + | − | − | − | + | − | + | − | + | + | + | + | + | 13/18 | 72 |
| Toyone et al | + | − | + | + | − | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | − | − | + | 14/18 | 78 |
| Yee et al | + | + | + | + | − | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | 17/18 | 94 |
Note: Articles were reviewed according to each criterion of the methodological assessment questionnaire (Fig. 1). Criteria were evaluated as + (criteria fulfilled), − (criteria not fulfilled), NA (not applicable), or Unk (unknown). Total score calculated as fulfilled criteria divided by sum of fulfilled and not fulfilled criteria).
Patient expectation assessment tools
| de Groot et al | Gepstein et al | Iversen et al | Johansson et al | Licina et al | Lutz et al | Mannion et al | McGregor and Hughes | McGregor et al | Rönnberg et al | Cobo Soriano et al | Toyone et al | Yee et al | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Symptomatology | ||||||||||||||
| Back pain | + | + | + | + | + | + | 6 | |||||||
| General pain | + | + | 2 | |||||||||||
| General symptom relief | + | 1 | ||||||||||||
| Leg numbness/weakness/instability | + | + | 2 | |||||||||||
| Leg pain | + | + | + | + | + | + | 6 | |||||||
| Sensibility | + | 1 | ||||||||||||
| Sleep comfort | + | 1 | ||||||||||||
| Activities | ||||||||||||||
| Activities of daily living | + | + | + | 3 | ||||||||||
| General function | + | 1 | ||||||||||||
| General physical | + | + | 2 | |||||||||||
| Independence in general activities | + | + | 2 | |||||||||||
| Recreational activities | + | + | 2 | |||||||||||
| Social life | + | + | 2 | |||||||||||
| Walking | + | + | + | 3 | ||||||||||
| General health | ||||||||||||||
| General, undefined expectations | + | + | + | + | 4 | |||||||||
| Health state | + | + | + | 3 | ||||||||||
| Life satisfaction | + | 1 | ||||||||||||
| Mental well-being | + | 1 | ||||||||||||
| Recovery | ||||||||||||||
| Complications | + | 1 | ||||||||||||
| Recovery time | + | + | + | 3 | ||||||||||
| Return to work | + | + | + | + | 4 | |||||||||
| Other | ||||||||||||||
| Oswestry Disability Index | + | 1 | ||||||||||||
Note: Preoperative expectation evaluation tools are arranged into five categories based upon type of expectation statement. + identifies tools applied to evaluate patient preoperative expectations.
Functional outcome assessment tools
| de Groot et al | Gepstein et al | Iversen et al | Licina et al | Johansson et al | Lutz et al | Mannion et al | McGregor and Hughes | McGregor et al | Rönnberg et al | Cobo Soriano et al | Toyone et al | Yee et al | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barthel Index | + | 1 | ||||||||||||
| Cantril Life Satisfaction | + | 1 | ||||||||||||
| EuroQol 5D | + | + | 2 | |||||||||||
| Macnab classification | + | 1 | ||||||||||||
| Oswestry Disability Index | + | + | + | + | + | + | 5 | |||||||
| Roland-Morris Disability | + | + | 2 | |||||||||||
| SF-36 | + | + | + | + | + | 5 | ||||||||
| Return to work | + | 1 | ||||||||||||
| Sickness Impact Profile | + | 1 | ||||||||||||
| VAS back pain | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | 7 | ||||||
| VAS health state | + | 1 | ||||||||||||
| VAS leg pain | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | 7 | ||||||
| Walking distance | + | 1 | ||||||||||||
| SF-12 |
Abbreviations: SF, Short Form Health Survey, VAS, visual analog scale.
Note: + identifies tools applied by respective studies for assessment of functional outcome.
Indicates SF-12.
Study conclusions
| Study | Positive correlation | Significance | Negative correlation | Significance | No significant correlation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Correlating preoperative expectations and postoperative satisfaction | |||||
| de Groot et al | Expectation of no (1) leg, (2) back pain had less disappointment at 3 d [significant when pain covariate | (1) | Postoperative disappointment and expectations for: (1) rate of recovery, (2) returning to work | ||
| Gepstein et al | Positive expectation associated with satisfaction |
| |||
| Iversen et al | Ambitiousness of expectations correlated with satisfaction with walking capacity |
| Greater expectation for pain relief correlated with decreased satisfaction with pain relief |
| |
| Johansson et al | Not assessed | ||||
| Licina et al | Very satisfied patients and expectations for: Oswestry Disability Index; back pain VAS; leg pain VAS | ||||
| Lutz et al | Those who expected shorter recovery (less than 3 mo) were more satisfied at 12 mo | OR 2.2 (1.1–4.4) | Expectation to return to usual health and satisfaction | ||
| Mannion et al | Not assessed | ||||
| McGregor and Hughes | Patients who rated themselves as either satisfied or very satisfied at the 6-wk review remained satisfied with the procedure at subsequent reviews, whereas those who were dissatisfied at 6 wk became progressively more dissatisfied at the subsequent reviews (no significance reported) | ||||
| McGregor et al | Satisfaction remained high despite expectations greater than outcome for: health VAS; back pain VAS; leg pain VAS | ||||
| Rönnberg et al | Global Satisfaction and expectation for: (1) sensibility, (2) muscle function; patients with no expectation for return to work were less satisfied with treatment (3) | (1) | Global satisfaction and expectation for leg pain ( | ||
| Cobo Soriano et al | Not assessed | ||||
| Toyone et al | Diskectomy fulfillment of expectations with greater expectations for (1) overall surgical success, (2) leg numbness | (1) | Fulfillment and expectations (diskectomy/stenosis): leg pain ( | ||
| Yee et al | Not assessed | ||||
| Correlating preoperative expectations and functional outcome | |||||
| de Groot et al | Expecting no leg pain (no history of back pain) had lowest postoperative followed by expecting no leg or back pain followed by expectation of pain: (1) leg pain at 3 d [not significant at 3 mo ( | (1) | Postoperative pain and expectations: rate of recovery, return to work | ||
| Gepstein et al | Not assessed | ||||
| Iversen et al | Number of expectation statements correlated with global function | β = –2.0; | Greater number of expectations for pain relief correlated with greater pain |
| Ambitiousness of expectation for walking capacity and outcome for walking capacity ( |
| Johansson et al | Low expectation to return to work at 3 mo correlated with 12-mo postoperative (1) being on sick leave; (2) greater leg pain; (3) greater back pain; (4) greater ODI; (5) lower EuroQol 5D | OR (95% CI): (1) 19.5 (2.1–179.2); (2) 8.2 (1.7–41.1); (3) 9.7 (1.9–49.1); (4) 13.8 (2.2–79.8); (5) 0.2 (0.3–0.9) | |||
| Licina et al | Not assessed | ||||
| Lutz et al | Expectations for recovery time, recovery extent, and return to usual health: Roland disability ( | ||||
| Mannion et al | Fulfillment of expectation for worst symptom explained the greatest variance in global treatment effectiveness (2 and 12 mo) | β = –0.448, | Expectation and outcome: leg pain, back pain; expectation for general physical capacity and Roland-Morris disability | ||
| McGregor and Hughes | Not assessed | ||||
| McGregor et al | Expectation and outcome for: (1) health VAS; (2) back pain VAS; (3) leg pain VAS | Rank correlation: 6 wk, 0.20–0.26; 6 mo, 0.20–0.28; 2 mo, 0.20–0.22 | |||
| Rönnberg et al | Level of expectation for improvement of (1)–(4) correlated with outcome: (1) leg pain, (2) sensibility, (3) muscle function, (4) return to work | (1) | Expectation for improvement and outcome: back pain ( | ||
| Cobo Soriano et al | Expectation for improvement correlated with (1) leg pain, (2) ODI | (1) β 12.48 (1.47–24.03); (2) β 6.28 (0.12–12.44) | Expectation for improvement and outcome: back pain, SF-36 PCS | ||
| Toyone et al | Expectation and postoperative: leg pain, back pain, leg numbness, walking ability, usual activity | ||||
| Yee et al | Expectations correlated with outcome, SF-36 PCS |
| Expectation and postoperative ODI | ||
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; ODI, Oswestry Disability Index; OR, odds ratio; SF-36 MCS, Short Form Health Survey 36 Mental Subcomponent; SF-36 PCS, Short Form Health Survey 36 Physical Subcomponent; VAS, visual analog scale.
Note: Positive, negative, and insignificant correlations presented for each study exploring the relationship between preoperative expectations and postoperative satisfaction, as well as, preoperative expectations and functional outcome. Significance and effect size presented where available.