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Patients and clinicians define symptom levels and meaningful change for PROMIS pain interference and fatigue in RA using bookmarking. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study aimed to understand how patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and clinicians interpret scores from PROMIS instruments used to measure pain interference and fatigue.
  • Researchers created patient scenarios to help identify symptom severity thresholds and what changes in scores are considered significant for treatment decisions.
  • Findings showed that patients typically set higher thresholds than clinicians for symptom severity and generally deemed a change of 5-10 points as meaningful, reflecting their personal experiences with RA and its impact on their daily lives.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Using patient-reported outcomes to inform clinical decision-making depends on knowing how to interpret scores. Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System® (PROMIS®) instruments are increasingly used in rheumatology research and care, but there is little information available to guide interpretation of scores. We sought to identify thresholds and meaningful change for PROMIS Pain Interference and Fatigue scores from the perspective of RA patients and clinicians.

Methods: We developed patient vignettes using the PROMIS item banks representing a continuum of Pain Interference and Fatigue levels. During a series of face-to-face 'bookmarking' sessions, patients and clinicians identified thresholds for mild, moderate and severe levels of symptoms and identified change deemed meaningful for making treatment decisions.

Results: In general, patients selected higher cut points to demarcate thresholds than clinicians. Patients and clinicians generally identified changes of 5-10 points as representing meaningful change. The thresholds and meaningful change scores of patients were grounded in their lived experiences having RA, approach to self-management, and the impacts on function, roles and social participation.

Conclusion: Results offer new information about how both patients and clinicians view RA symptoms and functional impacts. Results suggest that patients and providers may use different strategies to define and interpret RA symptoms, and select different thresholds when describing symptoms as mild, moderate or severe. The magnitude of symptom change selected by patients and clinicians as being clinically meaningful in interpreting treatment efficacy and loss of response may be greater than levels determined by external anchor and statistical methods.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8633670PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/keab014DOI Listing

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