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- Anne F Mannion, Tamas F Fekete, Maria M Wertli, Michele Mattle, Selina Nauer, Frank S Kleinstück, Dezsö Jeszenszky, Daniel Haschtmann, Hans-Jürgen Becker, François Porchet, and Lumbar Spinal Stenosis Outcome Study (LSOS) Group.
- *Spine Center, Schulthess Klinik, Zurich, Switzerland; and †Horten Centre, University Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
- Spine. 2015 May 15;40(10):710-8.
Study DesignLongitudinal study of the measurement properties of a brief outcome instrument.ObjectiveIn patients undergoing surgery for lumbar spinal stenosis, we compared the responsiveness of the Core Outcome Measures Index (COMI) with that of the condition-specific Swiss Spinal Stenosis Measure (SSM), an instrument developed to assess patients with neurogenic claudication.Summary Of Background DataThe COMI is a validated multidimensional questionnaire for assessing the key outcomes of importance to patients with back problems. Being brief, it is associated with minimal respondent burden and high completion rates. However, for a given pathology, intuitively it may be expected to be less responsive than a condition-specific instrument.MethodsA total of 91 patients (73±8 yr; 53% males) completed the following questionnaires before surgery: COMI, SSM, Roland Morris Disability Questionnaire, back trouble "Feeling Thermometer," pain numeric rating scale, EuroQoL-visual analogue scale. Twelve months postoperatively, 78/91 (86%) completed all the questionnaires again; they also rated the "global treatment outcome" (GTO; rated 1-5) and SSM "satisfaction with treatment result" (SSM-sat; rated 1-4), which were used as external criteria of treatment success.ResultsScores for the external criteria of success (GTO/SSM-sat) correlated with the change scores (baseline to 12 mo) in COMI (r=0.57) and SSM (r=0.54) to a similar extent. Using receiver operating characteristics, with GTO or SSM-sat dichotomized as external criterion, the area under the curve was similar for the COMI change score (0.86-0.90) and the SSM (sub)scales (0.80-0.90).ConclusionWith either SSM-sat or GTO serving as the external criterion, COMI was as responsive as the SSM. The COMI is well able to detect important change in lumbar spinal stenosis and has the added benefit of reducing the response burden for the patient and facilitating outcome comparisons with other spinal pathologies.Level Of Evidence2.
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