4.3 Article

Gradation of Clinical Holistic Response as New Composite Outcome to Evaluate Success in Spinal Cord Stimulation Studies for Pain

Journal

NEUROMODULATION
Volume 26, Issue 1, Pages 139-146

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.neurom.2021.10.020

Keywords

Composite end points; factor analysis; failed back surgery syndrome; neuromodulation; persistent spinal pain syn-drome type 2

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The aim of this study is to evaluate which measures should be included in a composite outcome and develop a new composite outcome to evaluate the degree of being a clinical holistic responder. Data from patients with persistent spinal pain syndrome type 2 were used, and various measures including pain intensity, disability, health-related quality of life, medication use, and patient satisfaction were evaluated. A new composite outcome was developed and the minimal clinical important difference (MCID) was determined.
Introduction: The most prominent outcome measurement in the field of neuromodulation is pain relief. Nevertheless, the number of studies that rely on composite outcomes has increased. The aims of this study are twofold: (1) to evaluate which measures are important to include in a composite outcome and (2) to develop this new composite outcome to evaluate the degree of being a clinical holistic responder with a corresponding minimal clinical important difference (MCID).Materials and Methods: Data from patients with persistent spinal pain syndrome type 2 treated with High-Dose Spinal Cord Stimulation (HD-SCS) were used. Pain intensity for low back and leg pain, disability, health-related quality of life, medication use, and patient satisfaction were measured at baseline and after 12 months of HD-SCS. Exploratory and Confirmatory Factor Analyses were used to evaluate which measures should be included in the composite outcome. Anchor-based and distribution-based methods were applied to determine the MCID of the newly developed outcome measurement.Results: A three-factor model was the most appropriate for this data set, in which leg pain intensity, EQ5D VAS, and disability had the largest loading on these factors. A clinical holistic outcome was created with a total score ranging from 0 (=better [no pain, no disability, and perfect health status]) to 300 (=worse [maximal pain, maximal disability, and worst health status]). The MCID value based on an absolute change score from baseline up to 12 months of HD-SCS was 87.97. When calculating with percentage changes, a MCID value of 48.4% was revealed.Conclusions: This new composite outcome evaluating the degree of deviation from being a holistic responder is a step toward a meaningful, overall outcome assessment for patients who are treated with SCS. Further studies to evaluate the psychometric properties and the generalizability toward other patient populations still need to be performed.

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