Validity of summing painful joint sites to assess joint-pain comorbidity in hip or knee osteoarthritis

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Abstract

Background: Previous studies in patients with hip and knee osteoarthritis (OA) have advocated the relevance of assessing the number of painful joint sites, other than the primary affected joint, in both research and clinical practice. However, it is unclear whether joint-pain comorbidities can simply be summed up. Methods. A total of 401 patients with hip or knee OA completed questionnaires on demographic variables and joint-pain comorbidities. Rasch analysis was performed to evaluate whether a sum score of joint-pain comorbidities can be calculated. Results: Self-reported joint-pain comorbidities showed a good fit to the Rasch model and were not biased by gender, age, disease duration, BMI, or patient group. As a group, joint-pain comorbidities covered a reasonable range of severity levels, although the sum score had rather low reliability levels suggesting it cannot discriminate well among patients. Conclusions: Joint-pain comorbidities, in other than the primary affected joints, can be summed into a joint pain comorbidity score. Nevertheless, its use is discouraged for individual decision making purposes since its lacks discriminative power in patients with minimal or extreme joint pain. © 2013 Siemons et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Siemons, L., Ten Klooster, P. M., Van De Laar, M. A. F. J., Van Den Ende, C. H. M., & Hoogeboom, T. J. (2013). Validity of summing painful joint sites to assess joint-pain comorbidity in hip or knee osteoarthritis. BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders, 14. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2474-14-234

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