The patient-reported Manchester-Oxford Foot Questionnaire (MOXFQ), with 3 dimensions (Walking/standing(W/S), Pain, Social interaction(SI)) has previously been validated in patients undergoing hallux valgus surgery. A preliminary cross-sectional evaluation of its measurement properties relating to surgery on different regions of the foot and ankle is presented here. Within 4 weeks prior to foot or ankle surgery, 671of 764 consecutive eligible patients (87.8% response rate) were assessed with the: (i) MOXFQ questionnaire, (ii) SF-36 general health survey (iii) American Orthopaedic Foot & Ankle Society (AOFAS) scales. Sample characteristics: mean age 53 years 427 (63.6%) female. Patients were booked for (main) surgery on Hallux (210, 31.3%), Lesser Toes (119, 17.7%), Mid foot (22, 3.3%), Ankle/Hind foot (311, 46.3%) and whole foot/multiple regions (9, 1.3%) MOXFQ item response rates were high (<2% missing on any one item) with responses generally well distributed across response categories. Item-total correlations within each dimension were generally above recommended levels. Internal consistency, as assessed by Cronbach's alpha, were 0.93, 0.84 and 0.71 for the W/S, Pain and SI dimensions, respectively. Within Hallux, Lesser toes and Ankle/hind foot surgical subgroups (low numbers precluded mid foot and whole/multiple region analyses), alphas for these subscales were similar. Convergent validity of MOXFQ was demonstrated by correlations between the 3 dimensions (W/S, Pain, SI) with similar dimensions of the SF-36 and relevant AOFAS scales. A priori hypotheses were generally supported. The MOXFQ demonstrates good baseline measurement properties in patients undergoing a range of foot and ankle surgery, suggesting its suitability as an outcome measure for clinical trials of foot and ankle surgery in general. The SI dimension, concerned with cosmesis and social participation has somewhat weaker properties but remains useful. Evidence for the MOXFQ's responsiveness across the range of foot and ankle surgery is yet to be assessed.
The responsiveness of the Manchester–Oxford Foot
Questionnaire (MOXFQ) was compared with foot/ankle-specific and
generic outcome measures used to assess all surgery of the foot
and ankle. We recruited 671 consecutive adult patients awaiting
foot or ankle surgery, of whom 427 (63.6%) were female, with a mean
age of 52.8 years (18 to 89). They independently completed the MOXFQ,
Short-Form 36 (SF-36) and EuroQol (EQ-5D) questionnaires pre-operatively
and at a mean of nine months (3.8 to 14.4) post-operatively. Foot/ankle
surgeons assessed American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society (AOFAS)
scores corresponding to four foot/ankle regions. A transition item measured
perceived changes in foot/ankle problems post-surgery. Of 628 eligible
patients proceeding to surgery, 491 (78%) completed questionnaires
and 262 (42%) received clinical assessments both pre- and post-operatively. The
regions receiving surgery were: multiple/whole foot in eight (1.3%),
ankle/hindfoot in 292 (46.5%), mid-foot in 21 (3.3%), hallux in
196 (31.2%), and lesser toes in 111 (17.7%). Foot/ankle-specific
MOXFQ, AOFAS and EQ-5D domains produced larger effect sizes (>
0.8)
than any SF-36 domains, suggesting superior responsiveness. In analyses
that anchored change in scores and effect sizes to patients’ responses
to a transition item about their foot/ankle problems, the MOXFQ
performed well. The SF-36 and EQ-5D performed poorly. Similar analyses,
conducted within foot-region based sub-groups of patients, found
that the responsiveness of the MOXFQ was good compared with the
AOFAS. This evidence supports the MOXFQ’s suitability for assessing
all foot and ankle surgery.
We developed a questionnaire to assess patient-reported outcome after surgery of the elbow from interviews with patients. Initially, 17 possible items with five response options were included. A prospective study of 104 patients (107 elbow operations) was carried out to analyse the underlying factor structure, dimensionality, internal and test-retest reliability, construct validity and responsiveness of the questionnaire items. This was compared with the Mayo Elbow performance score clinical scale, the Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand questionnaire, and the Short-Form (SF-36) General Health Survey. In total, five questions were considered inappropriate, which resulted in the final 12-item questionnaire, which has been referred to as the Oxford elbow score. This comprises three unidimensional domains, ‘elbow function’, ‘pain’ and ‘social-psychological’; with each domain comprising four items with good measurement properties. This new 12-item Oxford elbow score is a valid measure of the outcome of surgery of the elbow.