TY - JOUR
PY - 2022//
TI - Minimal clinically important difference of the Berg Balance Scale and comfortable walking speed in patients with acute stroke: a multicenter, prospective, longitudinal study
JO - Clinical rehabilitation
A1 - Hayashi, Shota
A1 - Miyata, Kazuhiro
A1 - Takeda, Ren
A1 - Iizuka, Takamitsu
A1 - Igarashi, Tatsuya
A1 - Usuda, Shigeru
SP - ePub
EP - ePub
VL - ePub
IS - ePub
N2 - OBJECTIVE: To determine the minimal clinically important difference between the Berg Balance Scale and comfortable walking speed in acute-phase stroke patients.
DESIGN: Multicenter, prospective, longitudinal study. SETTING: Inpatient acute stroke rehabilitation. SUBJECTS: Seventy-five patients with acute stroke, mean (SD) age 71.7 (12.2) years. INTERVENTION: Inpatients with acute stroke were assessed with the Berg Balance Scale and comfortable walking speed before and after rehabilitation. Physiotherapy was conducted to improve balance and gait over a 2-week period: an average of 40 min/day on weekdays and 20 min/day on weekends and holidays. MAIN MEASURES: The patients' Berg Balance Scale, comfortable walking speed, Global Rating of Change scale (patient-rated and physiotherapist-rated), and motor score of the Functional Independence Measure were obtained. Minimal clinically important differences were estimated using both anchor- (receiver operating characteristic curves and change difference) and distribution-based approaches (minimal detectable change and 0.5× the change score [SD]).
RESULTS: The baseline scores were 31.2 (18.9) for the Berg Balance Scale and 0.79 (0.35) m/s for comfortable walking speed. The minimal clinically important difference in the Berg Balance Scale was 6.5-12.5 points by the anchor-based approach and 2.3-4.9 points by the distribution-based approach. The minimal clinically important difference in comfortable walking speed was 0.18-0.25 m/s by the anchor-based and 0.13-0.15 m/s by the distribution-based approach.
CONCLUSIONS: A change of 6.5-12.5 points in the Berg Balance Scale and 0.18-0.25 m/s in the comfortable walking speed is required in these measurements' anchor-based minimal clinically important differences to be beyond measurement error, and to be perceptible by both patients and clinicians.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 0269-2155 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/02692155221108552 ID - ref1 ER -