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The Wisconsin Stone Quality of Life (WISQOL) questionnaire is a survey-based tool that has been used to show worse health-related quality of life due to stone disease. The minimum clinically important difference threshold for determining whether changes in the WISQOL tool are meaningfully significant has not previously been estimated. Our study aimed to determine this threshold using distribution- and anchor-based methods. A retrospective single-center cohort of patients at a kidney stone clinic was administered the WISQOL questionnaire at initial and follow-up visits from January 2018 to November 2023. Baseline characteristics and WISQOL standardized scores and subdomain scores were recorded. Distribution-based estimates were calculated at the initial visit and at follow-up. Three anchor questions were used to create a global transition question scale. Cross-sectional, longitudinal within-group, and longitudinal between-group anchor-based estimates were calculated. The cohort included 1197 individuals with both an initial clinic visit and a follow-up visit. The distribution-based minimum clinically important difference estimates ranged from 3.5 to 10.8. Cross-sectional anchor-based estimates ranged from 3.1 to 13.6. Within-group anchor-based estimates for improvement ranged from 8.5 to 10.3 and for deterioration ranged from 3.1 to 6.3. Between-group anchor-based estimates for improvement were 9.1 (adjusted confidence interval [CI]: 7.5-10.8) and for deterioration were 4.2 (adjusted CI: 2.3-6.1). A conservative threshold for clinical significance in total WISQOL score (standardized to scale of 0-100) is a difference of 9 for both improvement and deterioration. These findings can be used to further implement WISQOL in guiding clinical decision-making.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/end.2025.0028 | DOI Listing |
ERJ Open Res
September 2025
Department of Physical Therapy, School of Medicine, University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.
Background: Previous studies have shown that increasing physical activity in daily life (PADL) improves asthma clinical control and quality of life. However, the minimal clinically important difference (MCID) to promote those improvements remains unclear. The aim of this study was to estimate the MCID for PADL in people with moderate-to-severe asthma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMusculoskelet Sci Pract
September 2025
Department of Physiotherapy and Occupational Therapy, Aalborg University Hospital, Aalborg, 9000, Denmark; Aalborg University, Department of Clinical Medicine, Aalborg, 9000, Denmark.
Background: The Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) is a widely used tool for assessing pain severity and interference, aligning with the bio-psycho-social model. It has been validated in various languages for patients with persistent spinal pain. However, the Minimal Important Change (MIC), which represents the smallest change perceived as meaningful by patients, has not yet been explored for this patient population.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychiatry
August 2025
Intellectual Disabilities Research Institute (IDRIS), School of Social Policy and Society, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom.
Background: Evaluating the effectiveness of interventions relies on understanding what change in a main outcome is sufficient to be considered meaningful. Our aim was to estimate a Minimum Clinically Important Difference (MCID) for the Developmental Behaviour Checklist, parent-report (DBC-P)- a measure of behavioural and emotional problems in children and adolescents with intellectual disabilities.
Methods: We generated distribution-based estimates through meta-analysis of intervention evaluations using the DBC-P as an outcome measure.
Physiother Theory Pract
August 2025
Postgraduate Program in Rehabilitation Sciences, Universidade Nove de Julho (UNINOVE), São Paulo, Brazil.
Introduction: Assessing the state of functioning and disability post-stroke is essential for managing treatment and allocating appropriate resources.
Purpose: To explore the minimal important change (MIC) of the World Health Disability Assessment Schedule 2.0 (WHODAS 2.
J Biopharm Stat
August 2025
Data Science, Sage Therapeutics, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
Anchor based methods have been used in clinical studies to determine minimal clinically important differences (MCID) for clinical outcome assessments. However, the theoretical properties and robustness of the methodology are not fully understood. We conducted a simulation study to explore the performance of anchor-based methods across a range of values for outcome variance, placebo effects, anchor measurement noise, and confounding.
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