Exploring feasibility of health-related quality of life assessments and pain diaries in patients undergoing prehabilitation before total knee arthroplasty: a pilot study

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Abstract

BackgroundPrehabilitation prior to total knee arthroplasty (TKA) may mitigate deterioration in health-related quality of life (HRQOL) during the preoperative period and support recovery after surgery. However, little is known about the feasibility of systematically monitoring HRQOL and pain through patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) in this context. This pilot study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of using validated HRQOL questionnaires and daily pain diaries during a prehabilitation programme for patients awaiting (TKA) and up to 12 weeks postoperatively.MethodsTwenty patients (mean age 73 +/- 6 years) scheduled for primary unilateral TKA were randomly assigned to an intervention group (IG) or control group (CG). The IG participated in a 4- to 8-week individualised prehabilitation programme involving exercise and education. Feasibility was assessed through the completion rates of daily pain diaries and three HRQOL questionnaires (EQ-5D-5 L, SF-12 and KOOS KRQOL) collected at baseline, preoperatively, and at 6- and 12-weeks postoperatively.ResultsHRQOL questionnaires demonstrated high completion rates across both groups (90%). In contrast, adherence to paper-based pain diaries was suboptimal and notably low (CG: 58%; IG: 47%), falling below the threshold for meaningful analysis. Consequently, pain trajectory over time could not be reliably assessed. No significant group-by-time interaction effects were observed for any HRQOL measure: EQ-5D-5 L (p = 0.67; F = 0.51), KOOS KRQOL (p = 0.72; F = 0.64), SF-12 PCS (p = 0.06; F = 0.50) and MCS (p = 0.36; F = 0.10).ConclusionThis pilot study confirms the feasibility and acceptability of HRQOL questionnaires in older patients undergoing prehabilitation before TKA. However, the low diary completion rates highlight the need for alternative pain-monitoring-approaches - such as electronic formats - to improve data quality in future trials. Preliminary findings suggest potential benefits of prehabilitation, warranting further investigation in larger studies.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov Identifier; NCT05314985. Registered 20 July 2021. BASEC-Nr. 2020-03060.
Original languageEnglish
Article number988
Number of pages11
JournalBMC Musculoskeletal Disorders
Volume26
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 23 Oct 2025

Keywords

  • Feasibility studies
  • Prehabilitation
  • Health-Related quality of life
  • Total knee arthroplasty
  • Health diaries
  • OSTEOARTHRITIS OUTCOME SCORE
  • FUNCTIONAL OUTCOMES
  • HIP-ARTHROPLASTY
  • FOLLOW-UP
  • REPLACEMENT
  • PHYSIOTHERAPY
  • EXPECTATIONS
  • SCALES
  • INJURY
  • PAPER

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