Development of a Simplified Patient-Centered Pelvic Floor Surgery Complication Scale.

IF 1.4 4区 医学 Q3 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY Female Pelvic Medicine and Reconstructive Surgery Pub Date : 2022-04-01 DOI:10.1097/SPV.0000000000001099
Jocelyn Fitzgerald, Holly E Richter, Vivian Sung, Gena Dunivan, Mihriye Mete, Robert E Gutman
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Objectives: There does not currently exist a complication scale to evaluate pelvic reconstructive surgery (PRS) that takes in account patient-centered outcomes. The purpose of this study was to characterize and compare patient and surgeon responses to a simplified, patient-centered version of the previously described Pelvic Floor Complication Scale (PFCS).

Methods: This is a multicenter (4 female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery practices) cross-sectional study of patients and surgeons. Using focus groups and telephone surveys, the original PFCS questionnaire was simplified. One hundred and twenty-four patients were recruited 6-12 months after PRS. Fifty-seven surgeons were recruited via electronic questionnaires. Surgeons and patients were asked to rank the severity and bother of each complication on a scale of 0 to 5 (0, none; 1, mild; 3, moderate; 5, major).

Results: Patients rated bother higher than severity for 36 of 38 complications (all differences ≤0.5 points). For statistical analysis, the highest response to patient bother/severity was chosen to weigh in favor of the patient. Patient bother/severity scores were significantly different (±0.5 points) for 27 of 38 complications compared with surgeon responses. Surgeon scores were higher for 5 complications (0.5-1.9 point differences) related to major injury requiring repair and wound breakdown. Patient scores were higher for 22 complications with the highest differences related to dyspareunia, constipation, or new/persistent urinary incontinence.

Conclusions: This mixed methods investigation revealed key differences between how patients and surgeons value PRS complications. Surgeons scored major surgical injuries higher than patients, whereas patients rated issues that many surgeons consider quality-of-life outcomes higher due to potential long-term bother. These data will be used to create a simplified, patient-centered PFCS.

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以患者为中心的盆底手术并发症简化量表的开发。
目的:目前还没有一个并发症量表来评估骨盆重建手术(PRS),考虑到以患者为中心的结果。本研究的目的是描述和比较患者和外科医生对先前描述的盆底并发症量表(PFCS)的简化,以患者为中心的版本的反应。方法:这是一项多中心(4名女性骨盆医学和重建外科实践)患者和外科医生的横断面研究。采用焦点小组和电话调查,简化了原来的PFCS问卷。124例患者在PRS后6-12个月被招募。57名外科医生通过电子问卷被招募。外科医生和患者被要求将每种并发症的严重程度和麻烦程度按0到5分进行排序(0,无;1、温和;3、中等;5、主要)。结果:38例并发症中,患者对36例的评分高于严重程度(差异均≤0.5分)。为了进行统计分析,选择对患者困扰/严重程度的最高反应来衡量对患者有利。与外科医生的反应相比,38个并发症中的27个患者的困扰/严重程度评分有显著差异(±0.5分)。与需要修复和伤口破裂相关的5种并发症(0.5-1.9分差异)的外科医生评分较高。患者在22种并发症中得分较高,其中与性交困难、便秘或新发/持续性尿失禁相关的差异最大。结论:这种混合方法的调查揭示了患者和外科医生如何评价PRS并发症的关键差异。外科医生对重大手术损伤的评分高于患者,而许多外科医生认为由于潜在的长期困扰,患者对生活质量结果的评分更高。这些数据将用于创建一个简化的、以患者为中心的PFCS。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
12.50%
发文量
228
期刊介绍: Female Pelvic Medicine & Reconstructive Surgery, official journal of the American Urogynecologic Society, is a peer-reviewed, multidisciplinary journal dedicated to specialists, physicians and allied health professionals concerned with prevention, diagnosis and treatment of female pelvic floor disorders. The journal publishes original clinical research, basic science research, education, scientific advances, case reports, scientific reviews, editorials and letters to the editor.
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