04Dec 2021
The Minimal Clinically Important Difference: A Review of Clinical Significance

The Minimal Clinically Important Difference: A Review of Clinical Significance

The minimal clinically important difference (MCID) is a term synonymous with orthopaedic clinical research over the past decade. The term represents the smallest change in a patient-reported outcome measure that is of genuine clinical value to patients. It has been derived in a myriad of ways in existing orthopaedic literature. To describe the various modalities for deriving the MCID. Narrative review; Level of evidence. The definitions of common MCID determinations were first identified. These were then evaluated by their clinical and statistical merits and limitations. There are 3 primary ways for determining the MCID: anchor-based analysis, distribution-based analysis, and sensitivity- and specificity-based analysis. Each has unique strengths and weaknesses with respect to its ability to evaluate the patient’s clinical status change from baseline to posttreatment. Anchor-based analyses are inherently tied to clinical status yet lack standardization...

  • #orthopaedics

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