Publication date: Available online 21 September 2018
Source: The Spine Journal
Author(s): Carolyn E. Schwartz, Jie Zhang, Bruce D. Rapkin, Joel A. Finkelstein
Abstract
Background Context
Underlying cognitive factors have been found to influence patients' symptom experience. Current evidence suggests that concomitant changes in appraisal must be taken into account to accurately interpret change as measured by standard spine patient-reported outcomes (PROs).
Purpose
To investigate changes in patients' minimally important differences (MID) over recovery from spinal surgery; whether and how cognitive appraisal processes are implicated in the change trajectories.
Study Design/Setting
Longitudinal cohort study with up to 12 months follow-up
Patient Sample
Surgical patients (n= 167) with a diagnosis of disc herniation or spinal stenosis
Outcome Measures
Standard spine patient-reported PROs were used (Rand-36, Oswestry Disability Index, Numerical Rating Scale for pain, PROMIS Pain Impact).
Methods
This study was funded by the Feldberg Chair in Spinal Research, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre and the authors have no conflicts of interest. MID used an anchor technique and was computed by global assessment of change (GAC) grouping. Participants were binned into groups based on their GAC response patterns at all time points: Consistently Better Post-Surgery, Consistently Worse Post-Surgery, and Bouncers, whose GAC ratings fluctuate (i.e., better-then-worse-then-better; or vice versa). Individuals' longitudinal quality of life (QOL) and appraisal-slope scores were computed. QOL-appraisal slopes' correlations were computed by GAC group. Fisher's Z transformation tested the hypothesis that GAC groups differed in the QOL-appraisal relationship over time.
Results
Moderate to large changes are recognized as clinically important in the early stages of recovery (i.e., 6 weeks post-surgery) and over time smaller and smaller changes become important. The three pattern groups emphasized and deemphasized different standards of comparison over time, with the Better group emphasizing personal goals and the Worse and Bouncers deemphasizing doctors' input. These group differences translated to differential relationships between PRO change and appraisal changes over time.
Conclusions
The MID reflects increasingly subtle change over time in PROs. Appraisal may influence how patients experience the same (MID) change over time, with better outcomes associated with emphasizing long-term goals. PRO change seems to be driven by different standards of comparison. Potential avenues for clinical intervention are discussed.
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