A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Preoperative Evaluation of Oswestry Disability Index in Lumbar Spinal Stenosis: New Evidence of Time Independence of Variation Up to 1 Year




AuthorsHatakka, Juho; Pernaa, Katri; Kostensalo, Joel; Mäkelä, Keijo; Laaksonen, Inari

PublisherInternational Journal of Spine Surgery

Publication year2025

JournalInternational journal of spine surgery

Journal name in sourceInternational Journal of Spine Surgery

Volume19

Issue1

First page 110

Last page116

eISSN2211-4599

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.14444/8699

Web address https://doi.org/10.14444/8699

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/491519481


Abstract

Background The Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) is a well-validated and widely used patient-reported outcome instrument to evaluate lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS) patients’ treatment outcomes. The objective of the present study was to determine long the average interval between 2 preoperative measurements can be before a clinically significant difference of 10 points or more might appear.

Methods This was a retrospective observational study utilizing prospectively collected data from a single university hospital database, which was compatible with the national registry. One hundred and four surgically treated LSS patients were included in this observational study using systematic sampling. The preoperative ODI score was obtained at 2 timepoints. The 2-month mark as a potential turning point was of special interest, as the registry in question excludes preoperative data as outdated if the data are older than 2 months. Possible time dependence of the change in ODI scores was explored using a linear mixed-effects model with ODI as the dependent variable and interval length, sex, age, body mass index (BMI), and the presence of a concomitant disease as fixed effects.

Results The mean ODI score was 41.7 points (SD = 16.0) at the first and 41.1 points (SD = 15.5) at the second measurement. Mean time between the ODI scores was 74 days (range 8–361). On average, ODI changed by 9.17 points (SD = 7.16) between the 2 measurements, increasing for 48 patients, remaining unchanged for 9 patients, and decreasing for 47 patients. The arithmetic mean of the changes was −0.60 points and the median was 0.00 points. The estimated change in the population mean was −0.0005 points/day (95% CI [−0.022, 0.022], P = 0.97), meaning that we have strong evidence that the change in the mean is not clinically significant for up to 15 months (95% CI between ±10 points). Furthermore, no evidence was found that age, sex, BMI, or concomitant diseases were associated with the change of ODI score over time. Furthermore, the probability to observe a clinically significant change in a patient did not depend on the number of days between the 2 measurements (OR 1.003, 95% CI [0.997, 1.010], P = 0.30). Variance in ODI change did not grow over time.

Conclusions The probability of observing a clinically significant differences does not depend on the length of the observation interval, and ODI scores can be considered equally reliable for a significantly longer time than 2 months, even up to 1 year.

Clinical Relevance Preoperative ODI scores do not lose reliability up to 1 year in patients undergoing operatively treatment for LSS.

Level of Evidence 3.


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Funding information in the publication
This study was funded by State research funding of the Hospital District of Southwest Finland.


Last updated on 2025-03-06 at 14:22