The relation between clinical scores and quality-of-life in long-term follow-up

Fabio S. Catarinella*, Fred H. M. Nieman, Cees H. A. Wittens

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Introduction Quality-of-life and severity scores are both popular measures in medicine. For deep venous obstruction, the VEINES-QOL/Sym and venous clinical severity score (VCSS) are widely used. Combining a patient-reported outcome with a clinical severity score should give a more sensitive outcome for treatment results. To establish and compare their suitability for deep venous disease, we compared the outcomes of both scores in a group of patients who were interventionally treated for deep venous disease. Methods The venous clinical severity scores and VEINES-QOL/Sym scores of a group of patients who had received interventional treatment for deep venous obstruction more than 12 months ago were compared at T0 and T12. Results Both the Spearman's rho and Pearson's r show a very weak, negative correlation (statistically significant (p0.05)), between the venous clinical severity score and VEINES-QOL at T12 and between the venous clinical severity score and the VEINES-SYM at both T0 and T12. T0 VCSS-VSYM: rho=-0.219 (p=0.052), r=-0.236 (p=0.037), T12 VCSS-VQOL: rho=-0.459 (p=0.007), r=-0.379 (p=0.030), T12 VCSS-VSYM: rho=-0.463 (p=0.007), r=-0.432 (p=0.012). This negative correlation was not statistically (p0.05) confirmed for T0 VCSS-VSYM. Conclusion The physician-scored venous clinical severity score of patients treated for deep venous obstruction does not correlate well with their self-reported quality-of-life and symptom scores.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)99-105
JournalPhlebology: The Journal of Venous Disease
Volume31
Issue number1 suppl
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2016

Keywords

  • Quality-of-life
  • VEINES-QOL
  • Sym
  • VCSS
  • venous clinical severity score
  • severity score
  • patient-reported outcome
  • deep venous obstruction

Cite this