Reliability of the prospective data collection protocol of the Swedish Spine Register: Test-retest analysis of 119 patients
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1080/17453670610012764Abstract
Background The Swedish Lumbar Spine Register has been collecting patient-based data since 2000, and more than 80% of all spinal units in Sweden are now including their patients. In a few years, it will produce useful clinical information just as arthroplasty registers have, but to permit proper interpretation of data in the future, the reliability of the protocol must be tested. Methods Between January 2000 and March 2003, a sample of 122 patients was asked to fill in the questionnaire twice: 63 preoperatively and 59 postoperatively. Test-retest reliability was calculated with intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) or weighted kappa when appropriate. Results Test-retest interval varied (range 0–235 days); in the “worst case scenario”, the lowest ICC for SF-36 was 0.62 for the postoperative RE. Other values were above 0.70; for non-SF variables, ICC was in the range 0.79–0.89. Kappa values for the ordinal outcomes were high (0.74–0.91). Interpretation When separate reliability analysis was performed according to the time interval, a 0–2 days interval produced a significant memory effect; after 3 weeks, the reliability seemed to drop in the preoperative group, whereas results were reproducible up to 9 weeks postoperatively. The protocol studied can reliably detect postoperative improvements between large groups of patients such as in a register.Downloads
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Published
2006-01-01
How to Cite
Zanoli, G., Nilsson, L. T., & Strömqvist, B. (2006). Reliability of the prospective data collection protocol of the Swedish Spine Register: Test-retest analysis of 119 patients. Acta Orthopaedica, 77(4), 662–669. https://doi.org/10.1080/17453670610012764
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Acta Orthopaedica (Scandinavica) content is available freely online as from volume 1, 1930. The journal owner owns the copyright for all material published until volume 80, 2009. As of June 2009, the journal has however been published fully Open Access, meaning the authors retain copyright to their work. As of June 2009, articles have been published under CC-BY-NC or CC-BY licenses, unless otherwise specified.
