Can the oxford scores be used to monitor symptomatic progression of patients awaiting knee or hip arthroplasty?

Publication Type:
Journal Article
Citation:
Journal of Arthroplasty, 2013, 28 (9), pp. 1454 - 1458
Issue Date:
2013-10-01
Filename Description Size
1-s2.0-S088354031300226X-main.pdfPublished Version226.3 kB
Adobe PDF
Full metadata record
We report the week-to-week variation of the Oxford Knee and Oxford Hip Score (OKS, OHS) in individuals with severe osteoarthritis. People waitlisted for knee (n. = 51) or hip arthroplasty (n. = 52) were assessed twice, 1-week apart. There were no major week-to-week systematic biases in the scores. Limits of agreement (LOA) for both scores were wide (OKS, -. 9.5 to 6.6; OHS, -. 7.7 to 7). For most individual questions, the answers varied by ≤. 1 point in over 90% of participants. The week-to-week 95% LOA for the Oxford scores are unacceptably large, but variations within the individual questions are minimal. Consequently, reference to variation in the individual questions may be more useful for monitoring a patient's preoperative clinical change than changes in the total Oxford score. We conclude that the total scores are not suitable for monitoring the progression of OA in individual patients. © 2013.
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: