Abstract

Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) are commonly used to evaluate surgical outcome in patients undergoing joint replacement surgery, however routine collection from the target population is often incomplete. Representative samples are required to allow inference from the sample to the population. Although higher capture rates are desired, the extent to which this improves the representativeness of the sample is not known. We aimed to measure the representativeness of data collected using an electronic PROMs capture system with or without telephone call follow up, and any differences in PROMS reporting between electronic and telephone call follow up. Data from a pilot PROMs program within a large national joint replacement registry were examined. Telephone call follow up was used for people that failed to respond electronically. Data were collected pre-operatively and at 6 months post-operatively. Responding groups (either electronic only or electronic plus telephone call follow up) were compared to non-responders based on patient characteristics (joint replaced, bilaterality, age, sex, American Society of Anesthesiologist (ASA) score and Body Mass Index (BMI)) using chi squared test or ANOVA, and PROMs for the two responder groups were compared using generalised linear models adjusted for age and sex. The analysis was restricted to those undergoing primary elective hip, knee or shoulder replacement for osteoarthritis. Pre-operatively, 73.2% of patients responded electronically and telephone follow-up of non-responders increased this to 91.4%. Pre-operatively, patients responding electronically, compared to all others, were on average younger, more likely to be female, and healthier (lower ASA score). Similar differences were found when telephone follow up was included in the responding group. There were little (if any) differences in the post-operative comparisons, where electronic responders were on average one year younger and were more likely to have a lower ASA score compared to those not responding electronically, but there was no significant difference in sex or BMI. PROMs were similar between those reporting electronically and those reporting by telephone. Patients undergoing total joint replacement who provide direct electronic PROMs data are younger, healthier and more likely to be female than non-responders, but these differences are small, particularly for post-operative data collection. The addition of telephone call follow up to electronic contact does not provide a more representative sample. Electronic-only follow up of patients undergoing joint replacement provides a satisfactory representation of the population invited to participate.

Highlights

  • Patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) of health status are commonly recorded preand post-operatively in people undergoing joint replacement surgery as a measure of surgical thresholds and treatment effects for these common and resource intensive procedures

  • Responding groups were compared to nonresponders based on patient characteristics (joint replaced, bilaterality, age, sex, American Society of Anesthesiologist (ASA) score and Body Mass Index (BMI)) using chi squared test or ANOVA, and Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) for the two responder groups were compared using generalised linear models adjusted for age and sex

  • There were little differences in the post-operative comparisons, where electronic responders were on average one year younger and were more likely to have a lower American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) score compared to those not responding electronically, but there was no significant difference in sex or BMI

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Summary

Introduction

Patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) of health status are commonly recorded preand post-operatively in people undergoing joint replacement surgery as a measure of surgical thresholds and treatment effects for these common and resource intensive procedures. Unlike registries that commonly have near-complete coverage of all procedures, PROMs collection is rarely complete, being limited by resources and patient responsiveness. Registrybased PROMs collection in joint replacement surgery has coverage rates rarely higher than 80%, and often less than 50% [1,2]. A 60% threshold has been suggested for completeness in PROMs collection [3], but with any threshold, it is important to know the representativeness of the sample so that conclusions based on the sample can be applied to the population. Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) are commonly used to evaluate surgical outcome in patients undergoing joint replacement surgery, routine collection from the target population is often incomplete.

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