Abstract
Patellofemoral pain is a common and often debilitating musculoskeletal
condition. Clinical translation and evidence synthesis of patellofemoral
pain research are compromised by heterogenous and often inadequately
reported study details. This consensus statement and associated checklist
provides standards for REPORTing of quantitative PatelloFemoral Pain
(REPORT-PFP) research to enhance clinical translation and evidence
synthesis, and support clinician engagement with research and data
collection. A three-stage Delphi process was initiated at the 2015
International Patellofemoral Research Network (iPFRN) retreat. An initial
e-Delphi activity (n=24) generated topics and items, which were refined at
the 2017 iPFRN retreat, and voted on prior to and following the 2019 iPFRN
retreat (n=51 current and past retreat participants). Voting criteria
included ‘strongly recommended’ (essential), ‘recommended’ (encouraged) and
uncertain/unsure. An item was included in the checklist if ≥70% respondents
voted ‘recommended’. Items receiving ≥70% votes for ‘strongly recommended’
were labelled as such. The final REPORT-PFP checklist includes 31 items (11
strongly recommended, 20 recommended), covering (i) demographics (n=2,4);
(ii) baseline symptoms and previous treatments (n=3,7); (iii) outcome
measures (2,4); (iv) outcomes measure description (n=1,2); (v) clinical
trial methodology (0,3) and (vi) reporting study results (n=3,0). The
REPORT-PFP checklist is ready to be used by researchers and clinicians.
Strong stakeholder engagement from clinical academics during development
means consistent application by the international patellofemoral pain
research community is likely. Checklist adherence will improve research
accessibility for clinicians and enhance future evidence synthesis.
Subject
Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,General Medicine
Cited by
40 articles.
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