| Literature DB >> 32876715 |
Päivi K Karjalainen1,2, Nina K Mattsson3,4, Jyrki T Jalkanen5,6, Kari Nieminen6,7, Anna-Maija Tolppanen8.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION AND HYPOTHESIS: Patient-reported outcome measures are fundamental tools when assessing effectiveness of treatments. The challenge lies in the interpretation: which magnitude of change in score is meaningful for the patients? The minimal important difference (MID) is defined as the smallest difference in score that patients perceive as important. The Patient Acceptable Symptom State (PASS) represents the value of score beyond which patients consider themselves well. We aimed to determine the MID and PASS for Pelvic Floor Distress Inventory-20 (PFDI-20) and Pelvic Organ Prolapse Distress Inventory-6 (POPDI-6) in pelvic organ prolapse (POP) surgery.Entities:
Keywords: Minimal important difference; Patient-acceptable symptom state; Pelvic Floor Distress Inventory-20; Pelvic Organ Prolapse Distress Inventory-6; Pelvic organ prolapse surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32876715 PMCID: PMC8642346 DOI: 10.1007/s00192-020-04513-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Urogynecol J ISSN: 0937-3462 Impact factor: 2.894
Characteristics of previous studies estimating the minimal important difference (for improvement) for Pelvic Floor Distress Inventory-20
| Author | Year | N | Population | Method to determine MID | Anchor | MID |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barber [ | 2005 | 45 | Surgery for any pelvic floor dysfunction; POP 58%; baseline score 122; follow-up 3–6 months | Anchor based; mean change in score of those being ‘a little better’ on the global rating scale ( | Global perception of improvement; 7 points | 45 |
| Utomo [ | 2014 | 67 | Urinary incontinence, POP (57%), fecal incontinence; Conservative, pharmaceutical, or surgical treatment (66%); baseline score 94; follow-up 6 months | Anchor based; ROC-curve method Question 2 in the RAND 36 was dichotomized: patients reporting to be “a little better” or “much better” were classified as “improved,” while “same,” “a little worse,” or “much worse” were classified as “not improved” | RAND 36; question 2, rating of patient’s impression of their general health compared to 1 year ago; 5-point | 23 |
| Wiegersma [ | 2017 | 214 | Conservative treatment for POP; baseline score 56; follow-up 12 months | Anchor based; ROC curve method; global perception of improvement was dichotomized to categories “better” and “much better” vs “about the same,” “worse”, and “much worse” | Global perception of improvement; 5-point | 13.5 |
MID minimal important difference, POP pelvic organ prolapse, TVM transvaginal mesh, MUS mid-urethral sling, ROC receiver-operating characteristic
Characteristics of the study population (n = 2704)
| Characteristic | Value |
|---|---|
| Age, years, mean ± SD | 64.2 ± 10.3 |
| BMI, kg/m², mean ± SD | 26.9 ± 4.0 |
| Parity, median (IQR) | 2 (1) |
| Prior hysterectomy, | 916 (33.9) |
| Prior prolapse surgery, | 683 (25.3) |
| Prior anti-incontinence surgery, | 157 (5.8) |
| Current smoker, | 219 (8.1) |
| POP-Q point Ba ≥ 0, | 1714 (65.5) |
| POP-Q point Bp ≥ 0, | 1158 (44.4) |
| POP-Q point C ≥ 0, | 1047 (40.5) |
| PFDI-20 baseline score a, mean ± SD | 98.8 ± 49.8 |
| POPDI-6 baseline score b, mean ± SD | 40.8 ± 20.2 |
aThe scale of the score is 0–300, higher score indicating higher symptom burden
bThe scale of the score is 0–100, higher score indicating higher symptom burden
SD standard deviation, BMI body mass index, POP-Q Pelvic Organ Prolapse Quantification, PFDI-20 Pelvic Floor Distress Inventory-20, POPDI-6 Pelvic Organ Prolapse Distress Inventory-6
Mean PFDI-20 and POPDI-6 change scores for each global impression of change category
| Patient Global Impression of Improvement | PFDI-20 change score b | POPDI-6 change score c | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (95% CI) | Mean (95% CI) | ||
| Very much better | 842 (34.0) | −71.8 (−74.8 to −68.8) | −37.5 (−38.9 to −36.1) |
| Much better | 1133 (45.8) | −55.7 (−58.1 to −53.3) | −30.0 (−31.1 to −28.9) |
| A little better | 335 (13.5) | −37.9 (−42.5 to −33.4) | −19.4 (−21.3 to −17.4) |
| No change | 95 (3.8) | −13.5 (−21.9 to −5.1) | −10.4 (−14.9 to −6.0) |
| A little worse | 36 (1.5) | −30.5 (−48.5 to −12.6) | −14.2 (−22.1 to −6.3) |
| Much worse | 28 (1.1) | −8.5 (−26.2 to 9.1) | −9.9 (−19.2 to −0.6) |
| Very much worse | 6 (0.2) | −16.8 (−54.8 to 21.2) | −5.6 (−25.8 to 14.7) |
| All | 2475 (100) | −56.2 (−57.9 to −54.4) | −29.8 (−30.7 to −29.0) |
aCalculated for patients with PFDI-20 change score, POPDI-6 change score, and Patient Global Impression of Improvement available at 6 months
bThe scale of the score is 0–300, higher score indicating higher symptom burden. Negative value in change score indicates improvement. cThe scale of the score is 0–100, higher score indicating higher symptom burden. Negative value in change score indicates improvement
PFDI-20 Pelvic Floor Distress Inventory-20, POPDI-6 CI Pelvic Organ Prolapse Distress Inventory-6, CI confidence interval
Fig. 1MID for PFDI-20 and POPDI-6 derived with anchor-based and distribution-based methods. MID estimates defined with four different methods and their 95% confidence intervals. Vertical lines denote 95% confidence intervals. The dashed line indicates the median: - 24 points for PFDI-20 and -11 points for POPDI-6. MID, minimal important difference; PFDI-20, Pelvic Floor Distress Inventory-20; POPDI-6, Pelvic Organ Prolapse Distress Inventory-6; ROC, receiver-operating characteristics; SD, standard deviation
Proportion of patients reaching patient acceptable symptom state (PASS) at 2 years' follow-up for each global impression of change category
| PGI-I | Patients reporting to have reached PASS a | %; 95% CI |
|---|---|---|
| Very much better | 660/665 | 99; 98 to 100 |
| Much better | 945/990 | 96; 94 to 97 |
| A little better | 233/381 | 61; 56 to 66 |
| No change | 40/116 | 35; 26 to 44 |
| A little worse | 14/58 | 24; 14 to 37 |
| Much worse | 4/33 | 12; 3 to 28 |
| Very much worse | 6/18 | 33; 13 to 59 |
| All | 1902/2261 | 84; 82 to 85 |
aCalculated for patients with Patient Global Impression of Improvement and Patient Acceptable Symptom State available at 24 months
PASS Patient Acceptable Symptom State, PGI-I Patient Global Impression of Improvement, CI confidence interval
MID and PASS for PFDI-20 and POPDI-6 excluding patients with concomitant anti-incontinence surgery or rectopexy N = 2623
| Method used | MID for PFDI-20 (95% CI) | MID for POPDI-6 (95% CI) | PASS for PFDI-20 (95% CI) | PASS for POPDI-6 (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean change | −24.1 (−33.9 to −14.9) | −8.7 (−13.8 to −4.0) | NA | NA |
| ROC curve | −24.0 (−38.7 to −9.2) | −12.5 (−20.1 to −4.9) | 57.3 (54.4 to 60.1) | 16.7 (11.7 to 18.8) |
| 75th percentile | −22.1 (−26.2 to −19.9) | −12.5 (−16.1 to −10.6) | 62.5 (47.9 to 85.4) | 17.7 (12.1 to 23.4) |
| 0.5 SD | −24.7 (−25.7 to −24.3) | −10.1 (−10.4 to −9.9) | NA | NA |
| Median for above estimates | −24.1 | −11.3 | 59.9 | 17.2 |
MID and PASS estimates defined with different methods and their medians. Sensitivity analyses excluding women with concomitant anti-incontinence surgery (N = 24) and rectopexy (N = 57)
MID minimal important difference, PFDI-20 Pelvic Floor Distress Inventory-20, CI confidence interval, POPDI-6 Pelvic Organ Prolapse Distress Inventory-6, PASS Patient Acceptable Symptom State, ROC receiver-operating characteristics, SD standard deviation, NA not applicable