Abstract
Background
Patient reported outcome and experience measures have been a fundamental part of the NHS. We used PROMS2.0, a semi-automated web-based system, which allows collection and analysis of outcome data, to assess the patient reported outcome/experience measures for scarf+/− akin osteotomy for hallux valgus.
Methods
Prospective PROMs/PREMs data was collected. Scores used to asses outcomes included EQ-5D VAS, EQ-5D Health Index, and MOxFQ, collected pre-operatively and post-operatively (Post-op follow-up 6–12months) Patient Personal Experience (PPE-15) was collected postoperatively.
Results
40 patients (35Female/5Male) (19Left +21Right). Average age- 60.7 years (Range 29–88). No bilateral procedures.
Pre-op average MOXFQ scores for pain, walking and social interaction: 51.6 (range 5–100), 51.4 (range 0–96) and 48.8 (range 0–100) respectively. Post-operatively improved to 24.4 (range 0–100), 22.9 (range 0–86) and 23.1 (range 0–88). Corresponding P values for all < 0.00001 and statistically significant.
32/40 (80%) patients showed improvement in all three domains. Of 8 who worsened- 6 worse with pain, 4 with walking and 5 with social-interaction.
EQ5D improved; pre-op index average- 0.70 and pre-op VAS score average- 79.3. Post-op index average- 0.80. VAS score average- 82.9. Index improvements were significant, P-value < 0.0023 (significant). EQ5D improvements in line with those found in hip/knee replacements. No differences between 6/12m follow-up.
Patients stratified according to age-groups for analysis, 11 patients under 54 years old, 15 between 55–64, and 14 over 65. Greatest improvement in over 65s for MOxFQ and under 55s for EQ5D. 27/35 women improved in all MOxFQ domains, whilst 5/5 men did. P-value for age and sex both < 0.05 therefore significant. Age/sex EQ5D showed results of no statistical significance. 65 patients filled post-op PPE questionnaire. Average overall satisfaction of 72.9%.
Conclusion
The procedure is very effective with high PROMs/PREMs. Older sub-group have best outcomes and highest satisfaction.
Level of evidence
Prospective case series- Level 3