Investigating the Bias in Orthopaedic Patient-reported Outcome Measures by Mode of Administration: A Meta-analysis.

J Am Acad Orthop Surg Glob Res Rev

From the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Allegheny General Hospital (Dr. Acosta, Dr. Tang, Dr. Regal, Dr. Akhavan, Dr. Reynolds, and Dr. Hammarstedt); and the Highmark Health Data Science R&D (Ms. Schorr), Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Published: December 2020

Background: Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) are critical and frequently used to assess clinical outcomes to support medical decision-making.

Questions/purpose: The purpose of this meta-analysis was to compare differences in the modes of administration of PROMs within the field of orthopaedics to determine their impact on clinical outcome assessment.

Patients And Methods: The PubMed database was used to conduct a review of literature from 1990 to 2018 with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses protocol. All articles comparing PROMs for orthopaedic procedures were included and classified by the mode of administration. Each specific survey was standardized to a scale of 0 to 100, and a repeated random effectsmodel meta-analysis was conducted to determine the mean effect of each mode of survey.

Results: Eighteen studies were initially included in the study, with 10 ultimately used in the meta-analysis that encompassed 2384 separate patient survey encounters. Six of these studies demonstrated a statistically notable difference in PROM scores by mode of administration. The meta-analysis found that the standardized mean effect size for telephone-based surveys on a 100-point scale was 71.7 (SE 5.0) that was significantly higher (P , 0.0001) than survey scores obtained via online/tech based (65.3 [SE 0.70]) or self-administered/paper surveys (61.2 [SE 0.70]).

Conclusions: Overall, this study demonstrated that a documented difference exists in PROM quality depending on the mode of administration. PROM scores obtained via telephone (71.7) are 8.9% higher than scores obtained online (65.3, P , 0.0001), and 13.8% higher than scores obtained via self-administered on paper (61.8, P , 0.0001). Few studies have quantified statistically notable differences between PROM scores based solely on the mode of acquisition in orthopaedic.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7721213PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5435/JAAOSGlobal-D-20-00194DOI Listing

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