| Literature DB >> 35887664 |
Reinhart Speeckaert1, Arno Belpaire1, Sandrine Herbelet1, Marijn M Speeckaert2, Nanja van Geel1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinician-reported outcome measures (ClinROMs) are frequently used in clinical trials and daily practice to evaluate the disease status and evolution of skin disorders. The minimal important difference (MID) represents the smallest difference that decreases the disease impact enough to make a treatment change worthwhile for patients. As no clear guidance exists on the preferred method to calculate MIDs for ClinROMs, we evaluated how the published values for different skin disorders should be interpreted.Entities:
Keywords: MIC; MID; atopic dermatitis; dermatomyositis; minimally important change; minimally important difference; psoriasis; vitiligo
Year: 2022 PMID: 35887664 PMCID: PMC9321211 DOI: 10.3390/jpm12071167
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pers Med ISSN: 2075-4426
Figure 1PRISMA flow chart.
Analysis of the characteristics of MIDs for ClinROMs.
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| - Patient or proxy responding | 13/29 (44.8%) |
| - Physician/investigator responding | 16/29 (55.2%) |
| - Different patient group responding | 0/29 (0%) |
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| - Avoidance of difficult medical terminology, statements deemed adequate for their purpose | 13/13 (100%) |
| - Global assessments of change or global ratings of disease severity or disease activity that are generally accepted as easy to understand for patients | 7/13 (76.9%) |
| - Validated PROMS with confirmed comprehensibility for patients | 3/13 (23.1%) |
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| - Good correlation with the PROM (r ≥ 0.5) | 7/29 (24.1%) |
| - Moderate correlation with the PROM (r ≥ 0.3–0.5) | 5/29 (17.2%) |
| - Low correlation with the PROM (r < 0.3) | 0/29 (0%) |
| - No correlation mentioned | 17/29 (58.6%) |
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| - Very high number of patients | 9/29 (31.0%) |
| - High number of patients | 4/29 (13.8%) |
| - Less than adequate number of patients | 6/29 (20.7%) |
| - Insufficient number of patients | 10/29 (34.5%) |
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| - Small differences taken into account (most used terms: “mild”, “little”) | 15/29 (51.7%) |
| - No small differences taken into account | 14/29 (48.3%) |
| - Anchor questions handling the impact of the disease on the quality of life, tolerability of the disease, functional implications, and emotions (=> highly likely to accurately reflect important changes for the patients) | 3/29 (10.3%) |
| - Anchor questions about the severity of the disease/symptoms from a patients’ perspective | 9/29 (31.0%) |
| - Anchor questions assessing a small detectable change in symptoms rather than a clinically important change from a patients’ perspective | 1/29 (3.4%) |
| - Anchor questions not answered by patients, but assessing the global severity of the disease | 16/29 (55.2%) |
Scoring of the credibility of MIDs for physician-reported outcome measures.
| Is the Patient or Necessary Proxy Responding | Is the Anchor Easily Understandable and Relevant for Patients or Necessary Proxy? | Has the Anchor Shown Good Correlation with the Patient-Reported Outcome Measure? | Is the MID Precise? (95% Confidence Interval or Number of Patients Included in the Estimation) | Does Anchor Used to Estimate the MID | Does the Anchor Question Assess the Importance According to the Patient and Not Only a Change in Clinical Signs/Symptoms? | - What Does This MID Mean? | |
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| Schram et al., 2012 [ | No, physician | N = 42 (239 observations) | No, IGA | - Minimal difference in physicians’ assessment of disease severity (MID = 6.6) | |||
| Silverberg et al., 2021 [ | - Minimal difference in patients’ rated disease severity (MIDimprovement = 10.9) | ||||||
| Yüksel et al., 2021 [ | - Minimal difference in patients’ rated disease severity (MID = 4.5–7.1; mild: 1.5; moderate-severe: 8.9–9.5); | ||||||
| Oosterhaven et al., 2020 [ | No, physician | No, score by physicians | - Minimal difference in physicians’ assessment of disease severity (MID = 10.5–30.2; low baseline HECSI: 5.5–10.7; High baseline HECSI: 19.0–46.9) | ||||
| Silverberg et al., 2021 [ | No, physician | 2 | No, global severity (physician) | - Minimal difference in physicians’ assessment of disease severity (MID = 1.0) | |||
| Simpson et al., 2022 [ | - Minimal difference in patients’ rated disease severity (MID = −1.00) | ||||||
| Ofenloch et al., 2015 [ | No, physician | 2 0.48 | No, PGA | - Minimal difference in physicians’ assessment of disease severity (MID = 1.29) | |||
| Silverberg et al., 2021 [ | - Minimal difference in physicians’ assessment of disease severity (−0.9–−1.2) | ||||||
| Schram et al., 2012 [ | No, physician | N = 42 (239 observations) | No, IGA | - Minimal difference in patients’ rated disease severity (MID = 8.7) | |||
| Silverberg et al., 2021 [ | - Minimal difference in patients’ rated disease severity (MID = 16.6; mild AD: 2.7–15.8; moderate AD: 17.5–23.3; severe AD: 22.3–29.2); | ||||||
| Silverberg et al., 2021 [ | - Minimal difference in patients’ rated disease severity (MID = 13.0; mild AD: 1.5–11.7; moderate AD: 17.5–23.3; severe AD: 22.3–29.2); | ||||||
| Hanna et al., 2017 [ | No, physician | 0.48 | N = 28 | PGA ≥ 2 or Likert ≥ 3 considered as minimally changed | No, score by physicians | - A substantial difference in physicians’ assessment of disease severity (MID= +/−8.5) | |
| Wijayanti et al., 2017 [ | No, physician | N = 27 (108 observations) | Broad categories: improved, stable, or deteriorated | No, score by physicians | - A substantial difference in physicians’ assessment of disease severity [MID: 8.6 (improvement); 4 (deterioriation)] | ||
| Wijayanti et al., 2017 [ | No, physician | N = 27 (108 observations) | Broad categories: improved, stable, or deteriorated | No, score by physicians | - A substantial difference in physicians’ assessment of disease severity [MID = 4 (improvement); 3 (deterioration)] | ||
| Hanna et al., 2017 [ | No, physician | −0.46 | N = 28 | PGA ≥ 2 or Likert scale ≥ 3 considered as minimally changed | No, score by physicians | - A substantial difference in physicians’ assessment of disease severity (MID = +/−3) | |
| Jain et al., 2017 [ | No, physician | N = 29 | Broad categories: 3-point Likert | No, score by physicians | - A substantial difference in physicians’ assessment of disease severity [MID: 3 (deterioration); 9 (improvement)] | ||
| Cohen et al., 2020 [ | No, physician | −0.65 | N = 76 | Smallest categories: improved or worse. | No, score by physicians | - A substantial difference in physicians’ assessment of disease severity (MID = 1.0) | |
| Ahmed et al., 2020 [ | N = 103 | - Minimal difference in patients’ experienced disease impact/disease-related quality of life (MID: 7.86 (symptoms); MID: 10.29 (emotions) | |||||
| Anyanwu et al., 2015 [ | No, physician | N = 128 | 2-point change in PGA-VAS considered as minimally changed | No, PGA | - A substantial difference in physicians’ assessment of disease severity (MID = 4–5) | ||
| Kimball et al., 2014 [ | 2 −0.27–−0.47 | N = 138 | Broad categories in the ClinROM (0- < 30; 30- < 40; 40- < 50…) | - Minimal difference in patients’ experienced disease impact/disease-related quality of life. However due to the broad categories in the ClinROM, the change may be considered as substantial. (MID= 0.77–2.72); | |||
| Kelsey et al., 2013 [ | No, physician | N = 29 | Broad categories: Active or inactive | No, activity classification (physcian) | - A substantial difference in physicians’ assessment of disease severity (MID = 6 (4–8)) | ||
| Kelsey et al., 2013 [ | No, physician | N = 29 | Broad categories: Active or inactive | No, activity classification (physcian) | - A substantial difference in physicians’ assessment of disease severity (MID = 41 (34–51)) | ||
| Chakka et al., 2021 [ | N = 8 | Threshold in a PROM (Skindex-29 E: 9.38; Skindex-29 S: 7.37) | - A substantial difference in patients’ experienced disease impact/disease-related quality of life (MID = 3.3–7.4) | ||||
| Cappelleri et al., 2013 [ | 2 | N = 197 | - Minimal difference in patients’ rated disease severity (MID = 0.52; 95% CI: 0.47–0.56) | ||||
| Duffin et al., 2019 [ | 2 | - Minimal difference in patients’ rated disease severity (MID = 0.55; 0.45–0.56) | |||||
| Chularojanamontri et al., 2014 [ | No, physician | N = 100 | PASI-50 but not PASI-75 | No, PASI | - A substantial difference in physicians’ assessment of disease severity (MID= 5.25–7.57) | ||
| Noe et al., 2020 [ | No, physician | N = 41 | Broad categories: improved-no change-worsened | No, physician change rating (PCR) | - A substantial difference in physicians’ assessment of disease severity (MID = 5) | ||
| Hamzavi et al., 2021 [ | 0.45 | N = 157 | Very much and much improved = meaningfully changed | - A substantial difference in physicians’ assessment of disease severity (MID = 57% improvement of the facial-VASI; 42% improvement of the total-VASI) | |||
| Uitentuis et al., 2021 [ | No, only improvement in vitiligo extent | - Minimal difference in patients’ rated symptoms (MID = 0.5%) | |||||
Dark green: “definitely yes”; light green: “to a great extent”; yellow: “not so much”; red: “definitely no”; black: “impossible to tell”. 1 This conclusion is not an evaluation of the study quality per se but only a rating of the reported MID. 2 The reported correlation is not between the change of the PROM and the change of the anchor (or the transition rating anchor) or it is unclear whether it concerns baseline, follow-up, or changed values.