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Evaluating agreement between clinic- and patient-reported outcomes for weight and co-morbidities at 1 year after bariatric surgery. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated the agreement between patient-reported outcomes (PROs) and clinical registry data one year after bariatric surgery.
  • Ninety-five percent of patients' reported weights were within 13 pounds of registry records, indicating that patient reports were generally reliable, particularly for diabetes and hypertension.
  • The findings suggest that using patient reports can reduce the data-collection burden while providing accurate information for postoperative follow-up.

Article Abstract

Background: Development of patient-reported outcomes (PROs) to include traditionally clinic-reported data has the potential to decrease the data-collection burden for patients and clinicians and increase follow-up rates. However, replacing clinic report by patient report requires that the data reasonably agree.

Objective: To assess agreement between PROs and clinical registry data at 1 year after bariatric surgery.

Setting: Not-for-profit organization, bariatric surgery data registry, PROs platform.

Methods: Patient- and clinic-reported 1-year postoperative weight and co-morbidities were compared for matched PROs and registry records. The co-morbidities evaluated were diabetes, sleep apnea, hypertension, gastroesophageal reflux disease, and hyperlipidemia. Weight difference in pounds and nominal groupings (binary, 4-level) for co-morbidities were assessed for agreement between data sources using descriptive statistics, Bland-Altman plots, multiple regression, and kappa coefficients. Sensitivity analyses and follow-up by response method were examined.

Results: Among 1130 patients with both 1-year PROs and registry weights, 95% of patient-reported weights were within 13 lb of the registry-recorded weight, and patients underreported their weight by ∼2 lb, on average. Percent agreement and kappa coefficients were highest for diabetes (n = 999; binary: 94%, κ = .72; 4-level: 86%, κ = .71) and lowest for gastroesophageal reflux disease (n = 1032; binary: 75%, κ = .40; 4-level: 57%, κ = .35). Of patients eligible for both PROs and registry 1-year follow-up, 21% had PROs only.

Conclusions: One-year patient- and clinic-reported weights and disease status for patients with diabetes and hypertension showed high agreement. The degree of bias from patient report was low. Patient report is a viable alternative to clinic report for certain objective measurements and may increase follow-up.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.soard.2022.10.001DOI Listing

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