Reliability and Concurrent Validity of Shoulder Tissue Irritability Classification

Author:

Kareha Stephen M1ORCID,McClure Philip W2ORCID,Fernandez-Fernandez Alicia3

Affiliation:

1. Physical Therapy at St. Luke’s, St. Luke’s University Health Network, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, USA

2. Department of Physical Therapy, Arcadia University, Glenside, Pennsylvania, USA

3. Department of Physical Therapy, Nova Southeastern University, Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, USA

Abstract

Abstract Objective Rating tissue irritability has been recommended to aid decision making in several recent clinical practice guidelines. An explicit method for rating tissue irritability was proposed as part of the Staged Algorithm for Rehabilitation Classification: Shoulder Disorders (STAR-Shoulder), but the reliability and validity of this classification are unknown. The purpose of this study was to examine the reliability and concurrent validity of shoulder tissue irritability ratings as part of a system designed to guide appropriate treatment strategy and intensity. Methods A clinical measurement, prospective repeated-measures cross-sectional design was used. The 101 consecutive participants with primary complaints of shoulder pain were assessed by pairs of blinded raters (24 raters in total) and rated for tissue irritability. Patients completed 3 patient-reported outcome (PRO) measures reflecting both pain and disability, and these scores were compared with ratings of tissue irritability. Paired ratings of irritability were analyzed for reliability with prevalence-adjusted, bias-adjusted Kappa for ordinal scales. Analysis of variance was used to compare PRO measures across different levels of irritability. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis was utilized to derive cut-off scores for 3 PRO instruments. Results Interrater reliability was 0.69 (95% CI = 0.59–0.78), with 67% agreement. All PRO measures were significantly different among 3 levels of tissue irritability. Conclusion There appears to be acceptable reliability and a strong relationship between PRO measures and therapist-rated tissue irritability, supporting the use of the STAR-Shoulder irritability rating system. Impact Several clinical practice guidelines have recommended that clinicians rate tissue irritability as part of their examination. This study provides important new information supporting the reliability and validity of the STAR-Shoulder tissue irritability rating system.

Funder

Auxiliary of St. Luke’s Hospital

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation

Reference49 articles.

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