Responsiveness and ceiling effects of the Forgotten Joint Score-12 following total hip arthroplasty
D F Hamilton, J M Giesinger, D J MacDonald, A H R W Simpson, C R Howie & Karlmeinrad Giesinger
abstract |
OBJECTIVES METHODS RESULTS The FJS-12 is more responsive to change between six and 12 months following total hip arthroplasty than is the OHS, with the measured ceiling effect for the OHS twice that of the FJS-12. The difference in effect size of change results in substantial differences in required sample size if aiming to detect change between these two time points. This has important implications for powering clinical trials with patient-reported measures as the primary outcome.Cite this article: Dr D. F. Hamilton. Responsiveness and ceiling effects of the Forgotten Joint Score-12 following total hip arthroplasty. Bone Joint Res 2016;5:87-91. DOI: 10.1302/2046-3758.53.2000480. |
citation | Hamilton D F, Giesinger J M, MacDonald D J, Simpson A H R W, Howie C R, Giesinger K. Responsiveness and ceiling effects of the Forgotten Joint Score-12 following total hip arthroplasty. Bone Joint Res 2016; 5:87-91. |
type | journal paper/review (English) |
date of publishing | 3-2016 |
journal title | Bone Joint Res (5/3) |
pages | 87-91 |
PubMed | 26965167 |
DOI | 10.1302/2046-3758.53.2000480 |