Defining a minimum clinically important difference in patient-reported outcome measures in lumbar tubular microdecompression patients

TA VanHorn, ZO Knio, TJ O'GARA - International Journal of Spine …, 2020 - ijssurgery.com
Background Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) are critical tools used in the
assessment and reporting of surgical outcomes. However, significant differences in PROM …

PROMIS physical function score strongly correlates with legacy outcome measures in minimally invasive lumbar microdiscectomy

B Khechen, BE Haws, MS Bawa, IM Elboghdady… - Spine, 2019 - journals.lww.com
Study Design. Retrospective cohort. Objective. This study aims to determine the validity of
the patient-reported outcomes measurement information system (PROMIS) physical function …

Construct validity and responsiveness of commonly used patient reported outcome instruments in decompression for lumbar spinal stenosis

K Vishwanathan, I Braithwaite - Journal of Clinical Orthopaedics and …, 2021 - Elsevier
Background Validity and responsiveness of Oswestry disability index (ODI), Roland Morris
disability questionnaires (RMDQ), Short Form-12 Physical Component Score (SF-12 PCS) …

Patient-Reported Outcomes and Reoperation Rates Following Lumbar Tubular Microdecompression: Six-year Follow-Up

G Bullock, CA Sangio, EC Beck, AK Gowd, E Miller… - Spine, 2023 - journals.lww.com
Study Design. Prospective cohort study Objective. To report reoperation rates after lumbar
tubular microdecompression (LTM) and to compare patient-reported outcomes (PROs) six …

Minimum clinically important difference of major patient-reported outcome measures in patients undergoing decompression surgery for lumbar spinal stenosis

Y Ogura, K Ogura, Y Kobayashi, T Kitagawa… - Clinical Neurology and …, 2020 - Elsevier
Objective A minimum clinically important difference (MCID) has been increasingly well
known in the current era of patient-centered care because it reflects a smallest change that …

Development of prediction models for clinically meaningful improvement in PROMIS scores after lumbar decompression

AV Karhade, HA Fogel, TD Cha, SH Hershman… - The Spine Journal, 2021 - Elsevier
ABSTRACT BACKGROUND The ability to preoperatively predict which patients will achieve
a minimal clinically important difference (MCID) after lumbar spine decompression surgery …

Meeting patient expectations and achieving a minimal clinically important difference for back disability, back pain, and leg pain may provide predictive utility for …

KC Jacob, MR Patel, AP Collins, GJ Park, NN Vanjani… - World Neurosurgery, 2022 - Elsevier
Objective Our study evaluates minimum clinically important difference (MCID) achievement
for back pain/leg pain/disability and meeting preoperative expectations as predictors of …

Surgeon-level variance in achieving clinical improvement after lumbar decompression: the importance of adequate risk adjustment

AV Karhade, RC Sisodia, CM Bono, HA Fogel… - The Spine Journal, 2021 - Elsevier
Abstract BACKGROUND CONTEXT Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information
System (PROMIS) scores are increasingly utilized in clinical care. However, it is unclear if …

The influence of presenting physical function on postoperative patient satisfaction and clinical outcomes following minimally invasive lumbar decompression

KC Jacob, MR Patel, GA Park, JR Gheewala… - Clinical Spine …, 2023 - journals.lww.com
Study Design: The study of retrospective cohort. Objective: The aim was to compare patient-
reported outcome measures (PROMs), satisfaction, and minimum clinically important …

[HTML][HTML] Concomitant back and leg pain as predictors for trajectories of poor outcome after single level lumbar micro-decompression alone and with micro-discectomy …

R Carrasco, M Elmalky, S Sabou, J Leach… - Journal of Spine …, 2020 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Background Lumbar decompression is the commonest spinal intervention. One in four
patients have suboptimal outcome postoperatively, however no large studies identified clear …