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Spine

PATIENT-REPORTED OUTCOME MEASURES FOR DAY CASE MICRODISCECTOMY AT LANCASHIRE TEACHING HOSPITALS TRUST

The Society for Back Pain Research (SBPR) - Annual General Meeting 2016



Abstract

Background

PROMs have become an integral assessment tool of clinical effectiveness and patient satisfaction. To date, PROMs for lumbar discectomy are not an NHS requirement, although voluntary collection via the British Spine Registry is encouraged. Despite this, PROMs for day case microdiscectomy is scarcely reported. We present PROMs for day case microdiscectomy at Lancashire Teaching Hospitals.

Aims

  1. 1)

    To review PROMs to quantify leg pain, back pain, EQ5D and ODI scores.

  2. 2)

    Evaluate PROMs data collection compliance.

Methods

We studied PROMs data, taken prospectively as part of routine clinical care for all patients who underwent single level day case microdiscectomy between January 2013 to December 2015. PROMs included VAS for back and leg pain, EQ5D and ODI scores. Preoperative PROMs were compared to all available postoperative PROMs at 3 months, 6 months, 12 months and 24 months. Paired student T-tests were used to compare preoperative to postoperative scores.

Results

Preoperative PROMs were recorded for 132 patients. Postoperative PROMs were recorded for 48 patients at 3 months, 51 patients at 6 months, 37 patients at 12 months and 15 patients at 24 months. Significant postoperative improvements (p<0.05) were found at all time points for back pain, leg pain, EQ5D and ODI, with the exception EQ5D at 24 months (p = 0.10).

Conclusion

There was significant improvement in VAS back and leg scores, as well as ODI scores over 24 months. Further work is needed to improve compliance with postoperative PROMs and to optimise the benefit of these health assessment tools.

No conflicts of interest

No funding obtained