Which Psychological and Psychosocial Constructs Are Important to Measure in Future Tendinopathy Clinical Trials? A Modified International Delphi Study With Expert Clinician/Researchers and People With Tendinopathy

  • Carl Stubbs
  • , Sean McAuliffe
  • , Ruth L. Chimenti
  • , Brooke K. Coombes
  • , Terry Haines
  • , Luke Heales
  • , Robert Jan de Vos
  • , Greg Lehman
  • , Adrian Mallows
  • , Lori A. Michner
  • , Neal L. Millar
  • , Seth O'Neill
  • , Kieran O'Sullivan
  • , Melanie Plinsinga
  • , Michael Rathleff
  • , Ebonie Rio
  • , Megan Ross
  • , Jean Sebastien Roy
  • , Karin Gravare Silbernagel
  • , Athol Thomson
  • Tim Trevail, Inge van den Akker-Scheek, Bill Vicenzino, Johan W.S. Vlaeyen, Rafael Zambelli Pinto, Peter Malliaras

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

17 Citations (Scopus)
14 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

t OBJECTIVE: To identify which psychological and psychosocial constructs to include in a core outcome set to guide future clinical trials in the tendinopathy field. t DESIGN: Modified International Delphi study. t METHODS: In 3 online Delphi rounds, we presented 35 psychological and psychosocial constructs to an international panel of 38 clinician/ researchers and people with tendinopathy. Using a 9-point Likert scale (1 = not important to include, 9 = critical to include), consensus for construct inclusion required ≥70% of respondents rating “extremely critical to include” (score ≥7) and ≤15% rating “not important to include” (score ≤3). Consensus for exclusion required ≥70% of respondents rating “not important to include” (score ≤3) and ≤15% of rating “critical to include” (score ≥7). t RESULTS: Thirty-six participants (95% of 38) completed round 1, 90% (n = 34) completed round 2, and 87% (n = 33) completed round 3. Four constructs were deemed important to include as part of a core outcome set: kinesiophobia (82%, median: 8, interquartile range [IQR]: 1.0), pain beliefs (76%, median: −7, IQR: 1.0), pain-related self-efficacy (71%, median: 7, IQR: 2.0), and fear-avoidance beliefs (73%, median: −7, IQR: 1.0). Six constructs were deemed not important to include: perceived injustice (82%), individual attitudes of family members (74%), social isolation and loneliness (73%), job satisfaction (73%), coping (70%), and educational attainment (70%). Clinician/researchers and people with tendinopathy reached consensus that kinesiophobia, pain beliefs, pain self-efficacy, and fear-avoidance beliefs were important psychological constructs to measure in tendinopathy clinical trials.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)14-25
Number of pages12
JournalThe Journal of orthopaedic and sports physical therapy
Volume54
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2024

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