A Narrative Literature Review of Bias in Collecting Patient Reported Outcomes Measures (PROMs)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Collection Mode Related Bias
3.2. Non-Response Bias
3.3. Proxy/Caregiver Response Bias
3.4. Recall Bias
3.5. Language Bias
3.6. Timing Bias
3.7. Fatigue Bias
4. Discussion
- They are formulated in the most accurate way, in order to avoid language bias;
- They are not too long, to minimize fatigue bias;
- The questions are objective and referred to as observable facts, so that caregivers can also answer them in a reliable way.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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First Author | Year | Country | Bias | Specialty |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cabitza [6] | 2018 | Italy | Non-response bias, collection bias | Orthopedics |
Cabitza [7] | 2019 | Italy | Non-response bias, collection bias, fatigue bias | Orthopedics |
Hammarstedt [8] | 2017 | USA | Collection bias | Orthopedics |
Schilling [9] | 2016 | Australia | Timing bias | Orthopedics |
Karela [10] | 2020 | UK | Language bias | Rheumatology |
Péchon [11] | 2019 | UK | Language bias | Orthopedics |
Polk [12] | 2013 | Denmark | Non response bias | Orthopedics |
Chen [13] | 2020 | USA | Non response bias | Orthopedics |
Lindman [14] | 2020 | Sweden | Non response bias | Orthopedics |
Acosta [15] | 2020 | USA | Collection bias | Orthopedics |
Lapin BR [16] | 2021 | USA | Proxy bias | Neurology |
Richter [17] | 2021 | Germany | Collection bias | Rheumatology |
Imam [18] | 2014 | UK | Non response bias | Orthopedics |
Schröder [19] | 2019 | Netherlands | Collection bias | Orthopedics |
Shah [20] | 2016 | USA | Collection bias | Orthopedics |
Rutherford [21] | 2016 | Australia | Collection bias | Multiple specialties |
Kim [22] | 2004 | USA | Non response bias | Orthopedics |
Hutchings [23] | 2013 | UK | Non response bias | Multiple specialties |
Aleem [24] | 2017 | USA | Recall bias | Orthopedics |
Hofstedt [25] | 2019 | Sweden | Collection bias | Rheumatology |
Alvarez-Nebreda [26] | 2019 | USA | Proxy bias | Orthopedics |
Li [27] | 2015 | USA | Proxy bias | Multiple specialties |
Aleem [28] | 2018 | USA | Recall bias | Orthopedics |
Kwong [29] | 2016 | UK | Recall bias | Multiple specialties |
1st Author | Collection Methods | Results |
---|---|---|
Cabitza [6] | Electronic/Online (self-administrated) Telephone (with interviewer) | Collection methods can bias PROM scores: Scores reported on the phone are better than the ones reported online. |
Cabitza [7] | Electronic/Online (self-administrated) Telephone (with interviewer) | Collection methods can bias PROM scores: Scores collected on the telephone with an interviewer are significantly better than those collected online. |
Hammarstedt [8] | In person (self-administrated) Electronic/Online (self-administrated) Telephone (with interviewer) | Collection methods can bias PROM scores: PROMs collected via telephone are higher than online and in person. |
Acosta [15] | Telephone Electronic/Online Paper based In person | Collection method can bias PROM scores: PROMs collected via telephone are higher than online and paper. |
Richter [17] | App Paper based | No significant differences between paper based and online method. |
Schröder [19] | Paper based Electronic/Online | No significant differences between paper based and online method. |
Shah [20] | Paper based Electronic/Online | No significant differences between paper based and online method. Differences in scores on the EQ-5D descriptive questions, pain visual analog scale (VAS), and the NDI. |
Rutherford [21] | Paper based vs. Electronic/Online Self-completed vs. Assisted | No significant differences between self-completed paper and electronic. Self-completion and assisted completion generate equivalent scores overall. |
Hofstedt [25] | Paper based Online | No significant difference between paper based and online method. |
First Author | PROMs and Questionnaire Used | Surgery Type | Results |
---|---|---|---|
Cabitza [6] | SF-12 Mental and Physical SF-36 Mental and Physical | Mostly hip and knee prosthetic surgery and spine- related procedures. | There is no evidence that people quitting the follow-up (PRO) program would create either significantly better or worse scores. |
Cabitza [7] | SF-12 Mental and Physical SF-36 Mental and Physical VAS pain score | Mostly hip and knee prosthetic surgery and spine- related procedures. | Early responders reported a lower pain and better outcomes than late responders. But no difference for SF Mental Score. |
Polk [12] | Western Ontario Osteoarthritis of the Shoulder (WOOS) index | Shoulder replacement | Non-responders did not bias the overall results, but there is a trend of worst outcome for non-responders. |
Kim [22] | Modification of the Knee Society clinical rating system and functional score. | Total Knee Arthroplasty | Non-responders introduce a bias: they report poorer outcomes than responders. |
Hutchings [23] | Oxford Hip Score Oxford Knee Score Aberdeen Varicose Vein Questionnaire EQ-5D (EuroQuol 5 Dimensions) Sociodemographic questionnaires | Varicose vein surgery Hernia repair Knee or hip replacement | Non-responders introduce a bias: late responders reported a slightly poorer outcome (not statistically significant for VV surgery). |
Chen [13] | ODI (Oswestry Disability Index) VAS (Visual Analog Scale) leg/back Short Form-12 (SF-12) Physical/Mental PROMIS | Spine surgeries (decompression or fusion) | Non-responders introduce a bias: patients who stop follow-up score better. |
Lindman [14] | HAGOS (Copenhagen Hip and Groin Outcome Score) EQ-5D (EuroQuol 5 Dimensions) iHOT-12 (International Hip Outcome Tool) HSAS (Hip Sports Activity Scale) VAS (Visual Analogue Scale) for hip function | Hip arthroscopies | Non-responders did not bias the overall results: there is no difference except for patient satisfaction. |
Imam [18] | EQ-5D (EuroQuol 5 Dimensions) Oxford Hip Score complication, service satisfaction and outcome satisfaction questionnaires | Total hip replacement | Non responders introduce a bias: patients reporting good outcomes are overrepresented. |
1st Author | PROMs and Questionnaire Used | Results |
---|---|---|
Lapin [16] | PROMIS Global Health PROMIS 8-item SF: physical function, satisfaction with social roles and activities, anxiety, fatigue, pain interference, sleep disturbance Patient Health Questionnaire-9 depression screen Neuro-QoL cognitive function | Proxy response bias depends on the domain being tested: it is greater on more subjective domains, with proxies reporting worse outcomes. |
Alvarez-Nebreda [26] | PROMIS physical function (PF) and pain interference (PI) Timed Up and Go (TUG) FRAIL Questionnaire | Good agreement in both PROMIS PF and PROMIS PI even if for PROMIS PI proxies report a slightly higher score. |
Li [27] | MCBS (Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey) | Proxy response bias depends on the domain being tested: it was present in the physical, affective, cognitive, and social status domains but not in the sensory status domain. |
1st Author | PROMs and Questionnaire Used | Results |
---|---|---|
Aleem [24] | Numeric Pain Scores (NPS) for back pain and leg pain Oswestry Disability Indices (ODI) | Relying on patient recollection does not provide an accurate measure of preoperative state. |
Aleem [28] | Numeric Pain Scores (NPS) for neck pain, arm pain Neck Disability Indices (NDI) | Relying on patient recollection does not provide an accurate measure of preoperative state. |
Kwong [29] | SF-36/SF-12; WOMAC; American Urological Association Symptom Index, Western Ontario Meniscal Evaluation Tool; Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score; Oxford Hip Score; Lower Extremity Functional Scale and the feeling thermometer. | Retrospective collection offers a means of assessing PROMs in emergency admissions. |
First Author | PROMs and Questionnaire Used | Surgery Type | Results |
---|---|---|---|
Shilling [9] | SF-12 | Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) | Timing of PROM collection and the interpolation assumptions can bias economic evaluation. |
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Zini, M.L.L.; Banfi, G. A Narrative Literature Review of Bias in Collecting Patient Reported Outcomes Measures (PROMs). Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 12445. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182312445
Zini MLL, Banfi G. A Narrative Literature Review of Bias in Collecting Patient Reported Outcomes Measures (PROMs). International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(23):12445. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182312445
Chicago/Turabian StyleZini, Michela Luciana Luisa, and Giuseppe Banfi. 2021. "A Narrative Literature Review of Bias in Collecting Patient Reported Outcomes Measures (PROMs)" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 23: 12445. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182312445
APA StyleZini, M. L. L., & Banfi, G. (2021). A Narrative Literature Review of Bias in Collecting Patient Reported Outcomes Measures (PROMs). International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(23), 12445. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182312445