Literature DB >> 32499297

Evaluating the credibility of anchor based estimates of minimal important differences for patient reported outcomes: instrument development and reliability study.

Tahira Devji1, Alonso Carrasco-Labra2, Anila Qasim2, Mark Phillips2, Bradley C Johnston2,3, Niveditha Devasenapathy4, Dena Zeraatkar2, Meha Bhatt2, Xuejing Jin5, Romina Brignardello-Petersen2, Olivia Urquhart6, Farid Foroutan2, Stefan Schandelmaier2, Hector Pardo-Hernandez7,8, Robin Wm Vernooij9, Hsiaomin Huang10, Yamna Rizwan11, Reed Siemieniuk2, Lyubov Lytvyn2, Donald L Patrick12, Shanil Ebrahim2, Toshi Furukawa13, Gihad Nesrallah14,15,16, Holger J Schünemann2,17, Mohit Bhandari2,18, Lehana Thabane2, Gordon H Guyatt2,17.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To develop an instrument to evaluate the credibility of anchor based minimal important differences (MIDs) for outcome measures reported by patients, and to assess the reliability of the instrument.
DESIGN: Instrument development and reliability study. DATA SOURCES: Initial criteria were developed for evaluating the credibility of anchor based MIDs based on a literature review (Medline, Embase, CINAHL, and PsycInfo databases) and the experience of the authors in the methodology for estimation of MIDs. Iterative discussions by the team and pilot testing with experts and potential users facilitated the development of the final instrument. PARTICIPANTS: With the newly developed instrument, pairs of masters, doctoral, or postdoctoral students with a background in health research methodology independently evaluated the credibility of a sample of MID estimates. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Core credibility criteria applicable to all anchor types, additional criteria for transition rating anchors, and inter-rater reliability coefficients were determined.
RESULTS: The credibility instrument has five core criteria: the anchor is rated by the patient; the anchor is interpretable and relevant to the patient; the MID estimate is precise; the correlation between the anchor and the outcome measure reported by the patient is satisfactory; and the authors select a threshold on the anchor that reflects a small but important difference. The additional criteria for transition rating anchors are: the time elapsed between baseline and follow-up measurement for estimation of the MID is optimal; and the correlations of the transition rating with the baseline, follow-up, and change score in the patient reported outcome measures are satisfactory. Inter-rater reliability coefficients (ĸ) for the core criteria and for one item from the additional criteria ranged from 0.70 to 0.94. Reporting issues prevented the evaluation of the reliability of the three other additional criteria for the transition rating anchors.
CONCLUSIONS: Researchers, clinicians, and healthcare policy decision makers can consider using this instrument to evaluate the design, conduct, and analysis of studies estimating anchor based minimal important differences. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 32499297     DOI: 10.1136/bmj.m1714

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMJ        ISSN: 0959-8138


  25 in total

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5.  Substantial Inconsistency and Variability Exists Among Minimum Clinically Important Differences for Shoulder Arthroplasty Outcomes: A Systematic Review.

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6.  Seeing the patient's perspective: a guide to patient-reported outcome measures and minimal important differences in ophthalmic research.

Authors:  Anila Qasim; Tahira Devji; Mark R Phillips; Charles C Wykoff; Peter K Kaiser; Lehana Thabane; Mohit Bhandari; Varun Chaudhary
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7.  What is success of treatment? Expected outcome scores in cervical radiculopathy patients were much higher than the previously reported cut-off values for success.

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8.  Validity of the Japanese core outcome measures index (COMI)-neck for cervical spine surgery: a prospective cohort study.

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9.  Minimal important differences of EORTC QLQ-C30 for metastatic breast cancer patients: Results from a randomized clinical trial.

Authors:  Takuya Kawahara; Naruto Taira; Takeru Shiroiwa; Yasuhiro Hagiwara; Takashi Fukuda; Yukari Uemura; Hirofumi Mukai
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10.  Interventional treatments for chronic, axial or radicular, non-cancer, spinal pain: a protocol for a systematic review and network meta-analysis of randomised trials.

Authors:  Xiaoqin Wang; Grace Martin; Behnam Sadeghirad; Andrea J Darzi; Rachel J Couban; Ivan D Florez; Holly N Crandon; Elena Kum; Yaping Chang; Meisam Abdar Esfahani; Laxsanaa Sivananthan; Fatemeh Mehrabi; Neil K Sengupta; Preksha Rathod; Rami Z Morsi; D Norman Buckley; Gordon H Guyatt; Y Raja Rampersaud; Christopher J Standaert; Thomas Agoritsas; Jason W Busse
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2021-07-09       Impact factor: 2.692

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