Physical Therapy Publications

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-1-2024

Journal

PLoS One

Volume

19

Issue

8

First Page

1

Last Page

36

URL with Digital Object Identifier

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0307004

Abstract

BACKGROUND: International agreement supports physical functioning as a key domain to measure interventions effectiveness for low back pain. Patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) are commonly used in the lumbar spinal surgery population but physical functioning is multidimensional and necessitates evaluation also with physical measures.

OBJECTIVE: 1) To identify outcome measures (PROMs and physical) used to evaluate physical functioning in the lumbar spinal surgery population. 2) To assess measurement properties and describe the feasibility and interpretability of physical measures of physical functioning in this population.

STUDY DESIGN: Two-staged systematic review and narrative synthesis.

METHODS: This systematic review was conducted according to a registered and published protocol. Two stages of searching were conducted in MEDLINE, EMBASE, Health & Psychosocial Instruments, CINAHL, Web of Science, PEDro and ProQuest Dissertations & Theses. Stage one included studies to identify physical functioning outcome measures (PROMs and physical) in the lumbar spinal surgery population. Stage two (inception to 10 July 2023) included studies assessing measurement properties of stage one physical measures. Two independent reviewers determined study eligibility, extracted data and assessed risk of bias (RoB) according to COSMIN guidelines. Measurement properties were rated according to COSMIN criteria. Level of evidence was determined using a modified GRADE approach.

RESULTS: Stage one included 1,101 reports using PROMs (n = 70 established in literature, n = 67 developed by study authors) and physical measures (n = 134). Stage two included 43 articles assessing measurement properties of 34 physical measures. Moderate-level evidence supported sufficient responsiveness of 1-minute stair climb and 50-foot walk tests, insufficient responsiveness of 5-minute walk and sufficient reliability of distance walked during the 6-minute walk. Very low/low-level evidence limits further understanding.

CONCLUSIONS: Many physical measures of physical functioning are used in lumbar spinal surgery populations. Few have investigations of measurement properties. Strongest evidence supports responsiveness of 1-minute stair climb and 50-foot walk tests and reliability of distance walked during the 6-minute walk. Further recommendations cannot be made because of very low/low-level evidence. Results highlight promise for a range of measures, but prospective, low RoB studies are required.

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

journal.pone.0307004.s001.docx (73 kB)
S1 Appendix. Search strategies. (DOCX)

journal.pone.0307004.s002.docx (32 kB)
S2 Appendix. Rating criteria for measurement properties. (DOCX)

journal.pone.0307004.s003.docx (43 kB)
S3 Appendix. Articles excluded at full text stage (stage 2). (DOCX)

journal.pone.0307004.s004.xlsx (327 kB)
S4 Appendix. Stage one results. (XLSX)

journal.pone.0307004.s005.docx (58 kB)
S5 Appendix. Summary of stage one results. (DOCX)

journal.pone.0307004.s006.docx (1582 kB)
S6 Appendix. Stage two results. (DOCX)

journal.pone.0307004.s007.docx (33 kB)
S1 Checklist. PRISMA checklist. (DOCX)

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