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Patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis perceive positive improvements regardless of change in the Cobb angle - Results from a randomized controlled trial comparing a 6-month Schroth intervention added to standard care and standard care alone. SOSORT 2018 Award winner.


ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND:The Cobb angle is proposed as the "disease process" outcome for scoliosis research because therapies aim to correct or stop curve progression. While the Scoliosis Research Society recommends the Cobb angle as the primary outcome, the Society on Scoliosis Orthopaedic and Rehabilitation Treatment prioritises, as a general goal, patient related outcomes over Cobb angle progression. OBJECTIVE:To determine the threshold of change in the Cobb angle in adolescents with idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) who perceive improvement in a 6-months randomized controlled trial comparing a Schroth exercise intervention added to the standard of care to the standard of care alone. METHODS:This is a secondary analysis of data from a randomized controlled trial of 50 patients with AIS, with curves ranging from 10° to 45°, with or without a brace. Participants with diagnoses other than AIS, surgical candidates or patients who had scoliosis surgery were excluded. The 6-month interventions consisted of Schroth exercises added to standard-of-care (observation or bracing) with daily home exercises and weekly therapy sessions (Schroth) or standard-of-care alone (Control). The anchor method for estimating the minimal important difference (MID) in the largest Cobb angles (LC) was used. Patient-reported change in back status over the 6-month treatment period was measured using the Global Rating of Change (GRC) scale as anchor varying from -?7 ("great deal worse") to +?7 ("great deal better"). Participants were divided into two groups based on GRC scores: Improved (GRC ?2) or Stable/Not Improved (GRC ?1). MID was defined as the change in the LC that most accurately predicted the GRC classification as per the receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC). RESULTS:The average age was 13.4?±?1.6?years and the average LC was 28.5?±?8.8 °s. The average GRC in the control group was -?0.1?±?1.6, compared to +?4.4?±?2.2 in the Schroth group. The correlation between LC and GRC was adequate (r?=?-?0.34, p?

SUBMITTER: Schreiber S 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6615154 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Jul

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis perceive positive improvements regardless of change in the Cobb angle - Results from a randomized controlled trial comparing a 6-month Schroth intervention added to standard care and standard care alone. SOSORT 2018 Award winner.

Schreiber Sanja S   Parent Eric C EC   Hill Doug L DL   Hedden Douglas M DM   Moreau Marc J MJ   Southon Sarah C SC  

BMC musculoskeletal disorders 20190708 1


<h4>Background</h4>The Cobb angle is proposed as the "disease process" outcome for scoliosis research because therapies aim to correct or stop curve progression. While the Scoliosis Research Society recommends the Cobb angle as the primary outcome, the Society on Scoliosis Orthopaedic and Rehabilitation Treatment prioritises, as a general goal, patient related outcomes over Cobb angle progression.<h4>Objective</h4>To determine the threshold of change in the Cobb angle in adolescents with idiopat  ...[more]

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