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Minimum Clinically Important Difference of Gross Motor Function and Gait Endurance in Children with Motor Impairment: A Comparison of Distribution-Based Approaches

OBJECTIVE: The minimum clinically important difference (MCID) is a standard way of measuring clinical relevance. The objective of this work was to establish the MCID for the 6-minute walking test (6minWT) and the Gross Motor Function Measure (GMFM-88) in pediatric gait disorders. METHODS: A cohort,...

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Autores principales: Storm, Fabio Alexander, Petrarca, Maurizio, Beretta, Elena, Strazzer, Sandra, Piccinini, Luigi, Maghini, Cristina, Panzeri, Daniele, Corbetta, Claudio, Morganti, Roberta, Reni, Gianluigi, Castelli, Enrico, Frascarelli, Flaminia, Colazza, Alessandra, Cordone, Giampietro, Biffi, Emilia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7246400/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32509855
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/2794036
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author Storm, Fabio Alexander
Petrarca, Maurizio
Beretta, Elena
Strazzer, Sandra
Piccinini, Luigi
Maghini, Cristina
Panzeri, Daniele
Corbetta, Claudio
Morganti, Roberta
Reni, Gianluigi
Castelli, Enrico
Frascarelli, Flaminia
Colazza, Alessandra
Cordone, Giampietro
Biffi, Emilia
author_facet Storm, Fabio Alexander
Petrarca, Maurizio
Beretta, Elena
Strazzer, Sandra
Piccinini, Luigi
Maghini, Cristina
Panzeri, Daniele
Corbetta, Claudio
Morganti, Roberta
Reni, Gianluigi
Castelli, Enrico
Frascarelli, Flaminia
Colazza, Alessandra
Cordone, Giampietro
Biffi, Emilia
author_sort Storm, Fabio Alexander
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: The minimum clinically important difference (MCID) is a standard way of measuring clinical relevance. The objective of this work was to establish the MCID for the 6-minute walking test (6minWT) and the Gross Motor Function Measure (GMFM-88) in pediatric gait disorders. METHODS: A cohort, pretest-posttest study was conducted in a hospitalized care setting. A total of 182 patients with acquired brain injury (ABI) or cerebral palsy (CP) performed 20 robot-assisted gait training sessions complemented with 20 sessions of physical therapy over 4 weeks. Separate MCIDs were calculated using 5 distribution-based approaches, complemented with an anonymized survey completed by clinical professionals. RESULTS: The MCID range for the 6minWT was 20-38 m in the ABI cohort, with subgroup ranges of 20-36 m for GMFCS I-II, 23-46 m for GMFCS III, and 24-46 m for GMFCS IV. MCIDs for the CP population were 6-23 m, with subgroup ranges of 4-28 m for GMFCS I-II, 9-19 m for GMFCS III, and 10-27 m for GMFCS IV. For GMFM-88 total score, MCID values were 1.1%-5.3% for the ABI cohort and 0.1%-3.0% for the CP population. For dimension “D” of the GMFM, MCID ranges were 2.3%-6.5% and 0.8%-5.2% for ABI and CP populations, respectively. For dimension “E,” MCID ranges were 2.8%-6.5% and 0.3%-4.9% for ABI and CP cohorts, respectively. The survey showed a large interquartile range, but the results well mimicked the distribution-based methods. CONCLUSIONS: This study identified for the first time MCID ranges for 6minWT and GMFM-88 in pediatric patients with neurological impairments, offering useful insights for clinicians to evaluate the impact of treatments. Distribution-based methods should be used with caution: methods based on pre-post correlation may underestimate MCID when applied to patients with small improvements over the treatment period. Our results should be complemented with estimates obtained using consensus- and anchor-based approaches.
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spelling pubmed-72464002020-06-06 Minimum Clinically Important Difference of Gross Motor Function and Gait Endurance in Children with Motor Impairment: A Comparison of Distribution-Based Approaches Storm, Fabio Alexander Petrarca, Maurizio Beretta, Elena Strazzer, Sandra Piccinini, Luigi Maghini, Cristina Panzeri, Daniele Corbetta, Claudio Morganti, Roberta Reni, Gianluigi Castelli, Enrico Frascarelli, Flaminia Colazza, Alessandra Cordone, Giampietro Biffi, Emilia Biomed Res Int Research Article OBJECTIVE: The minimum clinically important difference (MCID) is a standard way of measuring clinical relevance. The objective of this work was to establish the MCID for the 6-minute walking test (6minWT) and the Gross Motor Function Measure (GMFM-88) in pediatric gait disorders. METHODS: A cohort, pretest-posttest study was conducted in a hospitalized care setting. A total of 182 patients with acquired brain injury (ABI) or cerebral palsy (CP) performed 20 robot-assisted gait training sessions complemented with 20 sessions of physical therapy over 4 weeks. Separate MCIDs were calculated using 5 distribution-based approaches, complemented with an anonymized survey completed by clinical professionals. RESULTS: The MCID range for the 6minWT was 20-38 m in the ABI cohort, with subgroup ranges of 20-36 m for GMFCS I-II, 23-46 m for GMFCS III, and 24-46 m for GMFCS IV. MCIDs for the CP population were 6-23 m, with subgroup ranges of 4-28 m for GMFCS I-II, 9-19 m for GMFCS III, and 10-27 m for GMFCS IV. For GMFM-88 total score, MCID values were 1.1%-5.3% for the ABI cohort and 0.1%-3.0% for the CP population. For dimension “D” of the GMFM, MCID ranges were 2.3%-6.5% and 0.8%-5.2% for ABI and CP populations, respectively. For dimension “E,” MCID ranges were 2.8%-6.5% and 0.3%-4.9% for ABI and CP cohorts, respectively. The survey showed a large interquartile range, but the results well mimicked the distribution-based methods. CONCLUSIONS: This study identified for the first time MCID ranges for 6minWT and GMFM-88 in pediatric patients with neurological impairments, offering useful insights for clinicians to evaluate the impact of treatments. Distribution-based methods should be used with caution: methods based on pre-post correlation may underestimate MCID when applied to patients with small improvements over the treatment period. Our results should be complemented with estimates obtained using consensus- and anchor-based approaches. Hindawi 2020-05-15 /pmc/articles/PMC7246400/ /pubmed/32509855 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/2794036 Text en Copyright © 2020 Fabio Alexander Storm et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Storm, Fabio Alexander
Petrarca, Maurizio
Beretta, Elena
Strazzer, Sandra
Piccinini, Luigi
Maghini, Cristina
Panzeri, Daniele
Corbetta, Claudio
Morganti, Roberta
Reni, Gianluigi
Castelli, Enrico
Frascarelli, Flaminia
Colazza, Alessandra
Cordone, Giampietro
Biffi, Emilia
Minimum Clinically Important Difference of Gross Motor Function and Gait Endurance in Children with Motor Impairment: A Comparison of Distribution-Based Approaches
title Minimum Clinically Important Difference of Gross Motor Function and Gait Endurance in Children with Motor Impairment: A Comparison of Distribution-Based Approaches
title_full Minimum Clinically Important Difference of Gross Motor Function and Gait Endurance in Children with Motor Impairment: A Comparison of Distribution-Based Approaches
title_fullStr Minimum Clinically Important Difference of Gross Motor Function and Gait Endurance in Children with Motor Impairment: A Comparison of Distribution-Based Approaches
title_full_unstemmed Minimum Clinically Important Difference of Gross Motor Function and Gait Endurance in Children with Motor Impairment: A Comparison of Distribution-Based Approaches
title_short Minimum Clinically Important Difference of Gross Motor Function and Gait Endurance in Children with Motor Impairment: A Comparison of Distribution-Based Approaches
title_sort minimum clinically important difference of gross motor function and gait endurance in children with motor impairment: a comparison of distribution-based approaches
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7246400/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32509855
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/2794036
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