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Reliability of proxy reports on patient reported outcomes measures in stroke: an updated systematic review

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Version 2 2024-05-17, 09:42
Version 1 2024-04-11, 16:32
journal contribution
posted on 2024-05-17, 09:42 authored by Claire Reimer, Sherlissa Ali-Thompson, Raseel Althawadi, Niall O'Brien, Catherine MoranCatherine Moran, Anne HickeyAnne Hickey

Objectives: With the rising global burden of stroke-related morbidity, and increased focus on patient-centered healthcare, patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) are increasingly used to inform healthcare decision-making. Some stroke patients with cognitive or motor impairments are unable to respond to PROMs, so proxies may respond on their behalf; the reliability of which remains unclear. The aim of the study is to update a 2010 systematic review to investigate the inter-rater reliability of proxy respondents answering PROMs for stroke patients.

Materials and methods: Studies on the reliability of proxy respondents in stroke were searched within CINAHL, Embase, PsycInfo, and WoS databases (01/07/22, 08/07/22). Fifteen studies were included for review. ICC and k-statistic were extracted for PROMs scales and categorized as poor (0.80). Bias was assessed using the CCAT.

Results: Five studies reported PROMs with inter-rater reliability scores ranging from 0.80. Two studies reported activities of daily living (ADLs) scores ranging from 0.41 to 0.80 and 8 studies reported quality of life (QoL) measures with scores ranging from 0.80. Subcategories of these scales included physical (ICC/k-statistic 0.41- >0.8), cognitive (ICC/k-statistic 0.40-0.80), communication (ICC/k-statistic <0.4-0.80,) and psychological (ICC/k-statistic <0.40-0.60) measures.

Conclusions: Proxy respondents are reliable sources for PROM reports on physical domains in ADLs, PROMs and QoL scales. Proxy reports for measures of communication and psychological domains had greater variability in reliability scores, ranging from poor to substantial; hence, caution should be applied when interpreting proxy reports for these domains.

Funding

RCSI University of Medicine & Health Sciences Research Summer School

History

Comments

The original article is available at https://www.strokejournal.org/

Published Citation

Reimer C. et al. Reliability of proxy reports on patient reported outcomes measures in stroke: an updated systematic review. J Stroke Cerebrovasc Dis. 2024;33(6):107700

Publication Date

1 April 2024

PubMed ID

38570060

Department/Unit

  • Health Psychology
  • Library
  • Undergraduate Research
  • School of Population Health

Publisher

Elsevier Inc.

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)