Responsiveness and Minimal Important Change of the IKDC of Middle-Aged and Older Patients With a Meniscal Tear
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Published:2019-01-04
Issue:2
Volume:47
Page:364-371
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ISSN:0363-5465
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Container-title:The American Journal of Sports Medicine
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Am J Sports Med
Author:
Noorduyn Julia C.A.1, van de Graaf Victor A.1, Mokkink Lidwine B.1, Willigenburg Nienke W.1, Poolman Rudolf W.1, Scholtes Vanessa A.B., Butter Ise, Mutsaerts Eduard L.A.R., Wolkenfelt Julius, Krijnen Matthijs R., van Deurzen Derek F.P., Moojen Dirk Jan F., Bloembergen Coen H., Nijland Olivier J.F., de Gast Arthur, Snijders Thom, Halma Jelle J., Saris Daniel B.F., Wolterbeek Nienke, Neeter Camille, Kerkhoffs Gino M.M.J., Peters Rolf W., van den Brand Igor C.J.B., de Vos-Jakobs Suzanne, Spoor Andy B., Gosens Taco, Rezaie Wahid, Hofstee Dirk Jan, Burger Bart J., Haverkamp Daniel, Vervest Anton M.J.S., van Rheenen Thijs A., Wijsbek Anne E., van Arkel Ewoud R.A., Thomassen Bregje J.W., Sprague Sheila, Mol Ben Willem J., van Tulder Maurits W.
Affiliation:
1. Investigation performed at Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, OLVG Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Abstract
Background: Responsiveness and the minimal important change (MIC) are important measurement properties to evaluate treatment effects and to interpret clinical trial results. The International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) Subjective Knee Form is a reliable and valid instrument for measuring patient-reported knee-specific symptoms, functioning, and sports activities in a population with meniscal tears. However, evidence on responsiveness is of limited methodological quality, and the MIC has not yet been established for patients with symptomatic meniscal tears. Purpose: To evaluate the responsiveness and determine the MIC of the IKDC for patients with meniscal tears. Study Design: Cohort study (design); Level of evidence 2. Methods: This study was part of the ESCAPE trial: a noninferiority multicenter randomized controlled trial comparing arthroscopic partial meniscectomy with physical therapy. Patients aged 45 to 70 years who were treated for a meniscal tear by arthroscopic partial meniscectomy or physical therapy completed the IKDC and 3 other questionnaires (RAND 36-Item Health Survey, EuroQol-5D-5L, and visual analog scales for pain) at baseline and 6-month follow-up. Responsiveness was evaluated by testing predefined hypotheses about the relation of the change in IKDC with regard to the change in the other self-reported outcomes. An external anchor question was used to distinguish patients reporting improvement versus no change in daily functioning. The MIC was determined by the optimal cutoff point in the receiver operating characteristic curve, which quantifies the IKDC score that best discriminated between patients with and without improvement in daily function. Results: Data from all 298 patients who completed baseline and 6-month follow-up questionnaires were analyzed. Responsiveness of the IKDC was confirmed in 7 of 10 predefined hypotheses about the change in IKDC score with regard to other patient-reported outcome measures. One hypothesis differed in the expected direction, while 2 hypotheses failed to meet the expected magnitude by 0.02 and 0.01 points. An MIC of 10.9 points was calculated for the IKDC of middle-aged and older patients with meniscal tears. Conclusion: This study showed that the IKDC is responsive to change among patients aged 45 to 70 years with meniscal tears, with an MIC of 10.9 points. This strengthens the value of the IKDC in quantifying treatment effects in this population.
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Subject
Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine
Cited by
14 articles.
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