• Acta neurochirurgica · May 2013

    Comparative Study

    Comparison between patient and surgeon perception of degenerative spine disease outcomes--a prospective blinded database study.

    • Ben Z Roitberg, Bart Thaci, Brenda Auffinger, Laura Kaplan, Jingjing Shen, Frederick D Brown, and Sandi Lam.
    • Section of Neurosurgery, Department of Surgery, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA.
    • Acta Neurochir (Wien). 2013 May 1;155(5):757-64.

    BackgroundFew have studied the correlation between patients' and spine surgeons' perception on outcomes, or compared these with patient-reported outcome scores. Outcomes studies are increasingly important in evaluating costs and benefits to patients and surgeons, and in developing metrics for payer evaluation and health care policy-making.ObjectiveTo compare patients' and surgeons' assessment of spine treatment outcome in a prospective blinded patient-driven spine surgery outcomes registry, and to correlate perceived outcomes ratings to validated outcomes scores.MethodsPatients filled out surveys at baseline, 3 months and 6 months postoperatively, including Visual Analog Scale (VAS), and Neck Disability Index (NDI) or Oswestry Disability Index (ODI). Outcome was rated independently by patients and surgeons on a 7-point Likert-type scale.ResultsTwo-hundred and sixty-five consecutive adult patients were surgical candidates. Of these, 154 (58.1 %) opted for surgery, with 69 (44.8 %) cervical and 85 (55.2 %) lumbar patients. One hundred and thirty-five (87.7 %) had both patient and surgeon postoperative ratings. Surgeons' and patients' ratings correlated strongly (Spearman rho = 0.53, p < 0.0001, 45.9 % identical, 88.2 % +/- 1 grade). The surgeon rated outcomes were better than patients in 29.8 % and worse in 21.15 %. Patient rating correlated better with the most recent NDI/ODI and pain scores than with incremental change from baseline. In multivariate analysis, age, location (cervical vs lumbar), pain ratings, and functional scores (NDI, ODI) did not have significant impact on the discrepancy between patient and surgeon ratings.ConclusionsPatients' and surgeons' global outcome ratings for spinal disease correlate highly. Patients' ratings correlate better with most recent functional scores, rather than incremental change from baseline.

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