| Literature DB >> 28944250 |
Robert W Westermann1,2, T Sean Lynch3, Morgan H Jones1, Kurt P Spindler1, William Messner1, Greg Strnad1, James Rosneck1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Validated patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) of hip pain and function at the time of arthroscopy could be predictors of the final outcome. Little is known about how patient factors or pathologic intra-articular findings relate to hip pain or function at the time of surgery for those presenting with femoroacetabular impingement (FAI).Entities:
Keywords: FAI; hip; mental health; patient reported outcome
Year: 2017 PMID: 28944250 PMCID: PMC5602220 DOI: 10.1177/2325967117726521
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orthop J Sports Med ISSN: 2325-9671
Baseline Scores and Characteristics of Patients Undergoing Hip Arthroscopy for Femoroacetabular Impingement
| Variable | No. | Mean | SD | Min | P25 | Median | P75 | Max |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HOOS | ||||||||
| Pain | 331 | 46.36 | 17.5 | 0 | 37.5 | 47.5 | 57.5 | 90 |
| PS | 331 | 59.19 | 18.23 | 9.2 | 49.2 | 62.3 | 73.1 | 100 |
| VR-12 | ||||||||
| PCS | 331 | 32.09 | 10.12 | 8.84 | 25.36 | 31.77 | 39.29 | 55.99 |
| MCS | 331 | 52.53 | 12.18 | 11.95 | 45.65 | 55.37 | 61.63 | 73.3 |
| UCLA Activity Score, 1-10 scale | 324 | 5.1 | 2.6 | 1 | 3 | 4 | 6 | 10 |
| Age at date of surgery, y | 331 | 32.91 | 12.49 | 13 | 21.5 | 33 | 43 | 67 |
| Body mass index | 327 | 26.22 | 4.92 | 15.8 | 22.66 | 25.4 | 28.77 | 46.29 |
| Years of education | 331 | 13.8 | 3.37 | 0 | 12 | 14 | 16 | 23 |
HOOS, Hip disability and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score; MCS, Mental Component Score; P25/P75, 25th/75th percentile; PCS, Physical Component Score; PS, Physical Function; UCLA, University of California–Los Angeles; VR-12, Veterans RAND 12-Item Health Survey.
Activity score: 1 = low, 10 = high.
Documented Intra-articular Pathologic Variables Identified Upon Diagnostic Arthroscopy
| Factor | No. | % |
|---|---|---|
| Revision surgery | ||
| No | 268 | 80.97 |
| Yes | 17 | 5.14 |
| Labral tear | ||
| No | 15 | 4.53 |
| Yes | 316 | 95.47 |
| Pincer deformity | ||
| None | 99 | 29.91 |
| Yes, without contrecoup | 159 | 48.04 |
| Yes, with contrecoup | 73 | 22.05 |
| Chondrolabral separation | ||
| No | 257 | 77.64 |
| Yes | 74 | 22.36 |
| Cartilage lesion grade | ||
| No cartilage lesion or grade I or II | 289 | 87.31 |
| Grade III or IV | 42 | 12.69 |
| Cam lesion | ||
| No | 22 | 6.65 |
| Yes | 309 | 93.35 |
Figure 1.Baseline predictors of hip pain (HOOS pain). The plot depicts the expected difference in HOOS pain for a “full scale” difference in each predictor variable, holding the other predictor variables in the model constant. “Full scale” means increasing the value of a variable from its minimum to its maximum (or “absent” to “present” for a binary variable). Male sex, more years of education (especially for patients aged 13-19 years but not as much for patients ≥50 years old), higher VR-12 MCS, and higher activity levels are associated with higher HOOS pain scores (less pain); smoking was associated with lower HOOS pain scores (more pain). Values are presented as changes to the HOOS-Pain score (range, 0-100). HOOS, Hip disability and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score; VR-12 MCS, Veterans RAND 12-Item Health Survey Mental Component Score.
Figure 2.Baseline predictors of hip function (HOOS-PS). The plot depicts the expected difference in HOOS-PS for a “full scale” difference in each predictor variable, holding the other predictor variables in the model constant. “Full scale” means increasing the value of a variable from its minimum to its maximum (or “absent” to “present” for a binary variable). Higher VR-12 MCS and higher activity levels are associated with higher HOOS-PS (improved hip function); smoking and fewer years of education for patients ≥50 years old predict lower HOOS-PS scores (worse function). Values are presented as changes to the HOOS-PS score (range, 0-100). HOOS-PS, Hip disability and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score––Physical Function Shortform; VR-12 MCS, Veterans RAND 12-Item Health Survey Mental Component Score.
Figure 3.The plot depicts the expected difference in VR-12 PCS for a “full scale” difference in each predictor variable, holding the other predictor variables in the model constant. “Full scale” means increasing the value of a variable from its minimum to its maximum (or “absent” to “present” for a binary variable). Male sex and higher activity levels are associated with higher VR-12 PCS scores; smoking and elevated BMI predict lower VR-12 PCS scores. Values are presented as changes to the VR-12 PCS score (range, 0-100). BMI, body mass index; VR-12 PCS, Veterans RAND 12-Item Health Survey Physical Component Score.
HOOS Pain: Multivariate Reference Model
| Term | Coefficient | SE | 95% CI on Coefficient |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intercept | 11.4 | 5.07 | 1.45 to 21.4 | .025 |
| Male (vs female) | 6.92 | 1.82 | 3.34 to 10.5 | <.001 |
| Smoker (vs nonsmoker) | –9.38 | 2.58 | –14.5 to –4.3 | <.001 |
| Education (per year) | 1.05 | 0.264 | 0.526 to 1.56 | <.001 |
| Additional effect for 13- to 19-y-olds | 0.612 | 0.213 | 0.193 to 1.03 | .004 |
| Additional effect for ≥50-y-olds | –0.549 | 0.182 | –0.907 to –0.191 | .003 |
| VR-12 MCS (per unit) | 0.212 | 0.0707 | 0.0724 to 0.351 | .003 |
| Activity level (per UCLA unit) | 1.59 | 0.348 | 0.91 to 2.28 | <.001 |
Model: multiple R 2 = 0.31, F 7,316 = 20.3, P < .001. UCLA, University of California–Los Angeles Activity Score; VR-12 MCS, Veterans RAND 12-Item Health Survey Mental Component Score.
HOOS Pain: Testing Arthroscopic Findings Variables in Context of Multivariate Reference Model
| Term | Coefficient | SE | 95% CI on Coefficient |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revision surgery | — | — | — | .737 |
| Yes vs no | –2.16 | 3.73 | –9.49 to 5.18 | .564 |
| No tear was repaired vs no | 1.14 | 2.54 | –3.86 to 6.14 | .653 |
| Labral tear (yes vs no) | –6.9 | 3.9 | –7.73 to 0.673 | .078 |
| Pincer deformity | — | — | — | .276 |
| Yes, without contrecoup | 0.0018 | 1.97 | –3.87 to 3.88 | .999 |
| Yes, with contrecoup | –3.2 | 2.4 | –7.93 to 1.53 | .184 |
| Chondrolabral separation (yes vs no) | –3.53 | 2.13 | –7.73 to 0.673 | .099 |
| Cartilage lesion | ||||
| Grade (III or IV vs none, I, or II) | –3.5 | 2.65 | –8.71 to 1.71 | .188 |
| Location (cartilage lesion vs none) | –0.305 | 2.45 | –5.12 to 4.51 | .901 |
| Cam lesion (yes vs no) | 2.23 | 3.29 | –4.24 to 8.71 | .498 |
Note that none of the arthroscopic findings variables showed a statistically significant association with the response variable in the context of the reference model. This means that there is no evidence that any arthroscopic findings variable adds information above what is available in the reference model for understanding or predicting HOOS pain. See the Discussion section for a note on power as a limitation of this result.
HOOS-PF: Multivariate Reference Model
| Term | Coefficient | SE | 95% CI on Coefficient |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intercept | 39.8 | 4.2 | 31.5 to 48 | <.001 |
| Smoker (vs nonsmoker) | –9.61 | 2.82 | –15.2 to –4.07 | <.001 |
| Years of education for patients aged ≥50 y | –0.56 | 0.2 | –0.953 to –0.167 | .005 |
| VR-12 MCS (per unit) | 0.219 | 0.0776 | 0.0665 to 0.372 | .005 |
| Activity level (per UCLA unit) | 1.95 | 0.373 | 1.22 to 2.69 | <.001 |
Model: multiple R 2 = 0.209, F 4,319 = 21.11, P < .001. UCLA, University of California–Los Angeles Activity Score; VR-12 MCS, Veterans RAND 12-Item Health Survey Mental Component Score.
HOOS-PF: Testing Arthroscopic Findings Variables in Context of Multivariate Reference Model
| Term | Coefficient | SE | 95% CI on Coefficient |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revision surgery | — | — | — | .895 |
| Yes vs no | –0.985 | 4.14 | –9.13 to 7.16 | .812 |
| No tear was repaired vs no | 1.06 | 2.82 | –4.48 to 6.6 | .707 |
| Labral tear (yes vs no) | –3.76 | 4.33 | –5.53 to 3.02 | .385 |
| Pincer deformity | — | — | — | .824 |
| Yes, without contrecoup | –0.717 | 2.15 | –4.95 to 3.52 | .739 |
| Yes, with contrecoup | –1.6 | 2.59 | –6.69 to 3.5 | .538 |
| Chondrolabral separation (yes vs no) | –1.25 | 2.17 | –5.53 to 3.02 | .565 |
| Cartilage lesion | ||||
| Grade (III or IV vs none, I, or II) | –0.298 | 2.93 | –6.06 to 5.46 | .919 |
| Location (cartilage lesion vs none) | 1.73 | 2.7 | –3.58 to 7.04 | .522 |
| Cam lesion (yes vs no) | 5.4 | 3.61 | –1.7 to 12.5 | .136 |
Note that none of the arthroscopic findings variables showed a statistically significant association with the response variable in the context of the reference model. This means that there is no evidence that any arthroscopic findings variable adds information above what is available in the reference model for understanding or predicting HOOS-PF. See the Discussion section for a note on power as a limitation of this result.
VR-12 PCS: Multivariate Reference Model
| Term | Coefficient | SE | 95% CI on Coefficient |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intercept | 30.5 | 2.85 | 24.9 to 36.1 | <.001 |
| Male (vs female) | 3.41 | 1.03 | 1.38 to 5.43 | .001 |
| Body mass index | –0.288 | 0.0958 | –0.476 to –0.0992 | .003 |
| Smoker (vs nonsmoker) | –4.97 | 1.43 | –7.79 to –2.15 | <.001 |
| Activity level (per UCLA unit) | 1.71 | 0.184 | 1.35 to 2.07 | <.001 |
Model: multiple R 2 = 0.318, F 4, 315 = 36.8, P < .001. UCLA, University of California–Los Angeles Activity Score.
VR-12 PCS: Testing Arthroscopic Findings Variables in Context of Multivariate Reference Model
| Term | Coefficient | SE | 95% CI on Coefficient |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revision surgery | — | — | — | .696 |
| Yes vs no | –0.767 | 2.11 | –4.92 to 3.38 | .716 |
| No tear was repaired vs no | –1.1 | 1.38 | –3.82 to 1.62 | .427 |
| Labral tear (yes vs no) | –1.92 | 2.28 | –3.34 to 1.45 | .401 |
| Pincer deformity | — | — | — | .733 |
| Yes, without contrecoup | 0.721 | 1.13 | –1.5 to 2.94 | .523 |
| Yes, with contrecoup | 0.978 | 1.35 | –1.68 to 3.63 | .469 |
| Chondrolabral separation (yes vs no) | –0.943 | 1.22 | –3.34 to 1.45 | .439 |
| Cartilage lesion | ||||
| Grade (III or IV vs none, I, or II) | –1.93 | 1.43 | –4.74 to 0.874 | .177 |
| Location (cartilage lesion vs none) | –0.613 | 1.3 | –3.18 to 1.95 | .638 |
| Cam lesion (yes vs no) | 3.16 | 1.88 | –0.53 to 6.86 | .093 |
Note that none of the arthroscopic findings variables showed a statistically significant association with the response variable in the context of the reference model. This means that there is no evidence that any arthroscopic findings variable adds information above what is available in the reference model for understanding or predicting VR-12 PCS. See the Discussion section for a note on power as a limitation of this result.