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Reliability, validity, and responsiveness of a novel subscapularis outcome score: the Baltimore Orthopedic Subscapularis Score

BACKGROUND: Available surveys that evaluate shoulder strength and pain often combine rotator cuff muscles making the test unable to differentiate subscapularis tears from other pathology including concomitant supraspinatus, infraspinatus tears. The purpose of this study was to validate a subscapular...

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Autores principales: Hamaker, Max, Enobun, Blessing, Kaveeshwar, Samir, Hasan, S. Ashfaq, Shiu, Brian, Henn, R. Frank, Kilcoyne, Kelly, Srikumaran, Umasuthan, Gasbarro, Gregory, R. Zimmer, Zachary, Gilotra, Mohit N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9637793/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36353434
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jseint.2022.08.006
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author Hamaker, Max
Enobun, Blessing
Kaveeshwar, Samir
Hasan, S. Ashfaq
Shiu, Brian
Henn, R. Frank
Kilcoyne, Kelly
Srikumaran, Umasuthan
Gasbarro, Gregory
R. Zimmer, Zachary
Gilotra, Mohit N.
author_facet Hamaker, Max
Enobun, Blessing
Kaveeshwar, Samir
Hasan, S. Ashfaq
Shiu, Brian
Henn, R. Frank
Kilcoyne, Kelly
Srikumaran, Umasuthan
Gasbarro, Gregory
R. Zimmer, Zachary
Gilotra, Mohit N.
author_sort Hamaker, Max
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Available surveys that evaluate shoulder strength and pain often combine rotator cuff muscles making the test unable to differentiate subscapularis tears from other pathology including concomitant supraspinatus, infraspinatus tears. The purpose of this study was to validate a subscapularis-specific shoulder survey (Baltimore Orthopedic Subscapularis Score) as a viable clinical outcome assessment through analysis of psychometric properties. METHODS: A 5-question survey was given to a study population of 390 patients, 136 of whom had full thickness rotator cuff tears with a minimum score of 5 (better) and a maximum score of 25 (worse). Surveys were given during the initial consultation, preoperative visit, and postoperative visit. Content validity, construct validity, test-retest reliability, responsiveness to change, internal consistency, and minimal clinically important difference using distribution and anchor-based methods were determined for our subscapularis function survey. RESULTS: A high correlation was reported on test-retest reliability (intraclass correlation coefficient = 0.89). An acceptable internal consistency was reported for all patients surveyed (Cronbach alpha = 0.91). Floor and ceiling effects for patients with rotator cuff pathology were minimized (1% for both). Patients with an isolated subscapularis tear scored worse than supraspinatus/infraspinatus tears and exhibited similar dysfunction as patients with a supraspinatus/infraspinatus/subscapularis tear. An acceptable construct validity was reported with subscapularis-involved tears demonstrating higher scores with significance (P < .05). There was excellent responsiveness to change with a standardized response mean of 1.51 and effect size of 1.27 (large > 0.8). The minimal clinically important difference using a distribution and anchor-based method was 4.1 and 4.6, respectively. Among patients with rotator cuff tears in this population, a score of 22 or higher predicts a subscapularis tear 75% of the time, in spite of its low overall prevalence. CONCLUSION: The subscapularis shoulder score demonstrated acceptable psychometric performance for outcomes assessment in patients with rotator cuff disease. This survey can be used as an effective clinical tool to assess subscapularis function.
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spelling pubmed-96377932022-11-08 Reliability, validity, and responsiveness of a novel subscapularis outcome score: the Baltimore Orthopedic Subscapularis Score Hamaker, Max Enobun, Blessing Kaveeshwar, Samir Hasan, S. Ashfaq Shiu, Brian Henn, R. Frank Kilcoyne, Kelly Srikumaran, Umasuthan Gasbarro, Gregory R. Zimmer, Zachary Gilotra, Mohit N. JSES Int Shoulder BACKGROUND: Available surveys that evaluate shoulder strength and pain often combine rotator cuff muscles making the test unable to differentiate subscapularis tears from other pathology including concomitant supraspinatus, infraspinatus tears. The purpose of this study was to validate a subscapularis-specific shoulder survey (Baltimore Orthopedic Subscapularis Score) as a viable clinical outcome assessment through analysis of psychometric properties. METHODS: A 5-question survey was given to a study population of 390 patients, 136 of whom had full thickness rotator cuff tears with a minimum score of 5 (better) and a maximum score of 25 (worse). Surveys were given during the initial consultation, preoperative visit, and postoperative visit. Content validity, construct validity, test-retest reliability, responsiveness to change, internal consistency, and minimal clinically important difference using distribution and anchor-based methods were determined for our subscapularis function survey. RESULTS: A high correlation was reported on test-retest reliability (intraclass correlation coefficient = 0.89). An acceptable internal consistency was reported for all patients surveyed (Cronbach alpha = 0.91). Floor and ceiling effects for patients with rotator cuff pathology were minimized (1% for both). Patients with an isolated subscapularis tear scored worse than supraspinatus/infraspinatus tears and exhibited similar dysfunction as patients with a supraspinatus/infraspinatus/subscapularis tear. An acceptable construct validity was reported with subscapularis-involved tears demonstrating higher scores with significance (P < .05). There was excellent responsiveness to change with a standardized response mean of 1.51 and effect size of 1.27 (large > 0.8). The minimal clinically important difference using a distribution and anchor-based method was 4.1 and 4.6, respectively. Among patients with rotator cuff tears in this population, a score of 22 or higher predicts a subscapularis tear 75% of the time, in spite of its low overall prevalence. CONCLUSION: The subscapularis shoulder score demonstrated acceptable psychometric performance for outcomes assessment in patients with rotator cuff disease. This survey can be used as an effective clinical tool to assess subscapularis function. Elsevier 2022-09-08 /pmc/articles/PMC9637793/ /pubmed/36353434 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jseint.2022.08.006 Text en © 2022 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Shoulder
Hamaker, Max
Enobun, Blessing
Kaveeshwar, Samir
Hasan, S. Ashfaq
Shiu, Brian
Henn, R. Frank
Kilcoyne, Kelly
Srikumaran, Umasuthan
Gasbarro, Gregory
R. Zimmer, Zachary
Gilotra, Mohit N.
Reliability, validity, and responsiveness of a novel subscapularis outcome score: the Baltimore Orthopedic Subscapularis Score
title Reliability, validity, and responsiveness of a novel subscapularis outcome score: the Baltimore Orthopedic Subscapularis Score
title_full Reliability, validity, and responsiveness of a novel subscapularis outcome score: the Baltimore Orthopedic Subscapularis Score
title_fullStr Reliability, validity, and responsiveness of a novel subscapularis outcome score: the Baltimore Orthopedic Subscapularis Score
title_full_unstemmed Reliability, validity, and responsiveness of a novel subscapularis outcome score: the Baltimore Orthopedic Subscapularis Score
title_short Reliability, validity, and responsiveness of a novel subscapularis outcome score: the Baltimore Orthopedic Subscapularis Score
title_sort reliability, validity, and responsiveness of a novel subscapularis outcome score: the baltimore orthopedic subscapularis score
topic Shoulder
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9637793/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36353434
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jseint.2022.08.006
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