Background: The standardization of outcome measures is needed for comparing studies and using common measures in clinical practice. We aimed to identify cognitive and patient-reported outcomes and timing of assessment for glioma, meningioma, and vascular surgery. Method: A consensus study was conducted. Participants selected cognitive and patient-reported measures among a list of instruments identifed through a literature search. Results: Seventeen cognitive tests for the glioma and meningioma’s evaluation, 8 for the vascular diseases, and one questionnaire on quality of life and one on emotional distress were identifed. The timing of outcome assessment selected was before surgery, at discharge, and after 3 and 12 months for glioma; before surgery and after 3 months for meningioma; before surgery, at discharge, and after 6 months for vascular diseases. Conclusion: The identifcation of common outcome measures is the frst step toward a shared data collection improving the quality and comparability of future studies
Schiavolin, S., Mariniello, A., Broggi, M., Abete-Fornara, G., Bollani, A., Palmas, G., Bottini, G., Querzola, M., Scarpa, P., Casarotti, A., De Michele, S., Isella, V., Mauri, I., Maietti, A., Miramonti, V., Orru, M. I., Pertichetti, M., Pini, E., Regazzoni, R., Subacchi, S., Ferroli, P., Leonardi, M., Patient-reported outcome and cognitive measures to be used in vascular and brain tumor surgery: proposal for a minimum set, <<NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES>>, 2022; 43 (8): 5143-5151. [doi:10.1007/s10072-022-06162-0] [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/213044]
Patient-reported outcome and cognitive measures to be used in vascular and brain tumor surgery: proposal for a minimum set
Maietti, Alessandra;
2022
Abstract
Background: The standardization of outcome measures is needed for comparing studies and using common measures in clinical practice. We aimed to identify cognitive and patient-reported outcomes and timing of assessment for glioma, meningioma, and vascular surgery. Method: A consensus study was conducted. Participants selected cognitive and patient-reported measures among a list of instruments identifed through a literature search. Results: Seventeen cognitive tests for the glioma and meningioma’s evaluation, 8 for the vascular diseases, and one questionnaire on quality of life and one on emotional distress were identifed. The timing of outcome assessment selected was before surgery, at discharge, and after 3 and 12 months for glioma; before surgery and after 3 months for meningioma; before surgery, at discharge, and after 6 months for vascular diseases. Conclusion: The identifcation of common outcome measures is the frst step toward a shared data collection improving the quality and comparability of future studiesI documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.