Objective: To determine the sensitivity to change and minimal clinically important difference (MCID)for the self-administered Locomotor Capabilities Index-5 (LCI-5)in people with lower limb amputation undergoing prosthetic training. Design: Prospective single-group observational study. Methods: The LCI-5 was administered to 110 patients (69 males [63%]; median [interquartile range]age, 60 [48–69]years)before and after prosthetic training. The external anchor administered after the program was a 7-point Global Rating of Change Scale (GRCS)designed to quantify the effect (improvement or deterioration)of the intervention. Results: Test–retest reliability of the LCI-5 (n = 30)was high (intraclass correlation coefficient [ICC2,1]= 0.92). The minimum detectable change at the 95% confidence level was 5.66 points. After triangulating these results with those of the mean-change approach and receiver operating characteristic (ROC)curve analysis (area under the ROC curve ≥ 0.90), based on a different GRCS score splitting, we identified 2 cutoffs for the LCI-5: a change of 7 points, indicating the MCID, and 12 points, indicating “large improvement” in locomotor capabilities (12.5% and 21.4% of the maximum possible score, respectively). Conclusions: The LCI-5 showed a high ability to detect change over time (responsiveness). The 2 proposed values (MCID of 7 points and large improvement of 12 points), based on a mix of distribution- and anchor-based approaches, represent cutoffs that can accurately identify 2 different levels of true change (as perceived by the patient)in locomotor capability after prosthetic training.
Sensitivity to change and minimal clinically important difference of the Locomotor Capabilities Index-5 in people with lower limb amputation undergoing prosthetic training
Monticone M.;
2019-01-01
Abstract
Objective: To determine the sensitivity to change and minimal clinically important difference (MCID)for the self-administered Locomotor Capabilities Index-5 (LCI-5)in people with lower limb amputation undergoing prosthetic training. Design: Prospective single-group observational study. Methods: The LCI-5 was administered to 110 patients (69 males [63%]; median [interquartile range]age, 60 [48–69]years)before and after prosthetic training. The external anchor administered after the program was a 7-point Global Rating of Change Scale (GRCS)designed to quantify the effect (improvement or deterioration)of the intervention. Results: Test–retest reliability of the LCI-5 (n = 30)was high (intraclass correlation coefficient [ICC2,1]= 0.92). The minimum detectable change at the 95% confidence level was 5.66 points. After triangulating these results with those of the mean-change approach and receiver operating characteristic (ROC)curve analysis (area under the ROC curve ≥ 0.90), based on a different GRCS score splitting, we identified 2 cutoffs for the LCI-5: a change of 7 points, indicating the MCID, and 12 points, indicating “large improvement” in locomotor capabilities (12.5% and 21.4% of the maximum possible score, respectively). Conclusions: The LCI-5 showed a high ability to detect change over time (responsiveness). The 2 proposed values (MCID of 7 points and large improvement of 12 points), based on a mix of distribution- and anchor-based approaches, represent cutoffs that can accurately identify 2 different levels of true change (as perceived by the patient)in locomotor capability after prosthetic training.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
monticone2 pdf.pdf
Solo gestori archivio
Tipologia:
versione post-print (AAM)
Dimensione
566.8 kB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
566.8 kB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri Richiedi una copia |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.