Journal article
Responsiveness and meaningful thresholds of PROMIS pain interference, fatigue, and physical function forms in adults with idiopathic inflammatory myopathies: Report from the OMERACT Myositis Working Group
Seminars in arthritis and rheumatism, Vol.64, 152339
2024
PMID: 38141522
Abstract
Background
A series of qualitative studies conducted by the OMERACT Myositis Working Group identified pain interference, fatigue, and physical function as highly important life impact domains for adults with idiopathic inflammatory myositis (IIM). In this study, our goal was to assess the responsiveness and minimal important difference of PROMIS pain interference (6a), fatigue (7a), and physical function (8b).
Methods
Adults with IIM from USA, Netherlands, Korea, Sweden, and Australia with two "clinical" visits were enrolled in this prospective study. Anchor questions on a Likert scale were collected at baseline, and manual muscle testing (MMT), physician and patient reported global disease activity, and PROMIS instruments were collected at both visits. Responsiveness was assessed with i) ANOVA, ii) paired t-test, effect size and standardized response mean, and iii) Pearson correlation. Minimal important difference (MID), minimal important change (MIC) and minimal detectable change (MDC) values were calculated.
Results
114 patients with IIM (median age 60, 60 % female) completed both visits. Changes in PROMIS instruments were significantly different among anchor categories. Patients who reported improvement had a significant improvement in their PROMIS scores with at least medium effect size, while patients who reported worsening and stability did not show a significant change with weak effect size. PROMIS instruments had weak to moderate correlations with MMT, patient and physician global disease activity. MID was approximately 2–3 points for Pain Interference and 3–4 points for Fatigue and Physical Function forms based on the method used. MIC was approximately 4–5 for improvement of all the instruments, while MDC was 1.7–2 points for Pain Interference and Physical Function and 3.2–3.9 for Fatigue.
Conclusion
This study provides evidence towards the responsiveness of the PROMIS instruments in a large international prospective cohort of adults with IIM supporting their use as PROMs in adult myositis.
Details
- Title
- Responsiveness and meaningful thresholds of PROMIS pain interference, fatigue, and physical function forms in adults with idiopathic inflammatory myopathies: Report from the OMERACT Myositis Working Group
- Authors/Creators
- D Saygin - University of PittsburghD DiRenzo - University of PennsylvaniaJ Raaphorst - Amsterdam NeuroscienceI de Groot - Patient Research Partner, NetherlandsC O Bingham - Johns Hopkins UniversityI E Lundberg - Karolinska InstitutetM Regardt - Karolinska University HospitalC Sarver - National Patient Safety FoundationM de Visser - University of AmsterdamL J Maxwell - University of OttawaD Beaton - University of TorontoJ Y Kim - Seoul National University HospitalM Needham - Murdoch University, Centre for Molecular Medicine and Innovative TherapeuticsH Alexanderson - Karolinska University HospitalL Christopher-Stine - Johns Hopkins UniversityC A Mecoli - Johns Hopkins UniversityJ K Park - Seoul National University HospitalOMERACT Myositis Working Group
- Publication Details
- Seminars in arthritis and rheumatism, Vol.64, 152339
- Publisher
- Elsevier Inc.
- Identifiers
- 991005623666507891
- Copyright
- © 2023 Elsevier Inc.
- Murdoch Affiliation
- Institute for Immunology and Infectious Diseases
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article
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