Measurement and monitoring of nausea severity in emergency department patients: A comparison of scales and exploration of treatment efficacy outcome measures

Objectives The objective was to investigate the correlation of the visual analog scale (VAS) and numeric rating scale (NRS) for nausea severity measurement and to explore options for improved reporting of antiemetic efficacy trial results. Methods This was a multicenter observational study of adult...

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Main Authors: Meek, R., Egerton-Warburton, Diana, Mee, M., Braitberg, G.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Blackwell Publishing Inc. 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/43506
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author Meek, R.
Egerton-Warburton, Diana
Mee, M.
Braitberg, G.
author_facet Meek, R.
Egerton-Warburton, Diana
Mee, M.
Braitberg, G.
author_sort Meek, R.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Objectives The objective was to investigate the correlation of the visual analog scale (VAS) and numeric rating scale (NRS) for nausea severity measurement and to explore options for improved reporting of antiemetic efficacy trial results. Methods This was a multicenter observational study of adult emergency department (ED) patients with nausea. Participants rated severity at enrollment and 30 minutes posttreatment using an adjectival scale, a VAS, and an NRS. Posttreatment, patients described symptom change and rated satisfaction. Results Ratings were performed by 258 patients. Both the VAS (0 to 100 mm) and the NRS (0 to 10) discriminated between adjectival severity categories. Median ratings with interquartile ranges (IQRs) were "severe" VAS 90.5 (IQR = 79 to 97) and NRS 9 (IQR = 8 to 9), "moderate" VAS 59 (IQR = 48 to 71) and NRS 6 (IQR = 5 to 7), "mild" VAS 34 (IQR = 25 to 49) and NRS 4 (IQR = 3 to 5), and "none" VAS 5 (IQR = 0 to 9) and NRS 0 (IQR = 0 to 1). Correlation between the VAS and NRS was high (0.83, Spearman). For the VAS, median mm (IQR) reductions for posttreatment change were "a lot less" -42 (IQR = -26 to -58.5), "a little less" -20.5 (IQR = -11 to -33), "the same" -2 (IQR = -8 to 3.5), "a little more" 14 (IQR = -2 to 22), and "a lot more" 17 (IQR = 6 to 23) and for satisfaction were "very satisfied" -45 (IQR = -27 to 63), "satisfied" -27 (IQR = -13 to 46), "unsure" -15 (IQR = -3 to -24), "dissatisfied" 4.5 (IQR = -5.5 to 13.5), and "very dissatisfied" 8.5 (IQR = 0 to 23). A VAS cutoff of =-5 mm detected symptom improvement with sensitivity 91.6% (95% CI = 86.7% to 95.1%), specificity 72.1% (95% CI = 59.9% to 82.3%), and positive predictive value 90.2% (95% CI = 85.1% to 94.0%). Conclusions The VAS and NRS correlate highly. A VAS cutoff level of =-5 mm was a good predictor of symptom improvement, suggesting that its inclusion as an outcome measure would enhance reporting in antiemetic efficacy trials.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-435062017-09-13T14:01:54Z Measurement and monitoring of nausea severity in emergency department patients: A comparison of scales and exploration of treatment efficacy outcome measures Meek, R. Egerton-Warburton, Diana Mee, M. Braitberg, G. Objectives The objective was to investigate the correlation of the visual analog scale (VAS) and numeric rating scale (NRS) for nausea severity measurement and to explore options for improved reporting of antiemetic efficacy trial results. Methods This was a multicenter observational study of adult emergency department (ED) patients with nausea. Participants rated severity at enrollment and 30 minutes posttreatment using an adjectival scale, a VAS, and an NRS. Posttreatment, patients described symptom change and rated satisfaction. Results Ratings were performed by 258 patients. Both the VAS (0 to 100 mm) and the NRS (0 to 10) discriminated between adjectival severity categories. Median ratings with interquartile ranges (IQRs) were "severe" VAS 90.5 (IQR = 79 to 97) and NRS 9 (IQR = 8 to 9), "moderate" VAS 59 (IQR = 48 to 71) and NRS 6 (IQR = 5 to 7), "mild" VAS 34 (IQR = 25 to 49) and NRS 4 (IQR = 3 to 5), and "none" VAS 5 (IQR = 0 to 9) and NRS 0 (IQR = 0 to 1). Correlation between the VAS and NRS was high (0.83, Spearman). For the VAS, median mm (IQR) reductions for posttreatment change were "a lot less" -42 (IQR = -26 to -58.5), "a little less" -20.5 (IQR = -11 to -33), "the same" -2 (IQR = -8 to 3.5), "a little more" 14 (IQR = -2 to 22), and "a lot more" 17 (IQR = 6 to 23) and for satisfaction were "very satisfied" -45 (IQR = -27 to 63), "satisfied" -27 (IQR = -13 to 46), "unsure" -15 (IQR = -3 to -24), "dissatisfied" 4.5 (IQR = -5.5 to 13.5), and "very dissatisfied" 8.5 (IQR = 0 to 23). A VAS cutoff of =-5 mm detected symptom improvement with sensitivity 91.6% (95% CI = 86.7% to 95.1%), specificity 72.1% (95% CI = 59.9% to 82.3%), and positive predictive value 90.2% (95% CI = 85.1% to 94.0%). Conclusions The VAS and NRS correlate highly. A VAS cutoff level of =-5 mm was a good predictor of symptom improvement, suggesting that its inclusion as an outcome measure would enhance reporting in antiemetic efficacy trials. 2015 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/43506 10.1111/acem.12685 Blackwell Publishing Inc. unknown
spellingShingle Meek, R.
Egerton-Warburton, Diana
Mee, M.
Braitberg, G.
Measurement and monitoring of nausea severity in emergency department patients: A comparison of scales and exploration of treatment efficacy outcome measures
title Measurement and monitoring of nausea severity in emergency department patients: A comparison of scales and exploration of treatment efficacy outcome measures
title_full Measurement and monitoring of nausea severity in emergency department patients: A comparison of scales and exploration of treatment efficacy outcome measures
title_fullStr Measurement and monitoring of nausea severity in emergency department patients: A comparison of scales and exploration of treatment efficacy outcome measures
title_full_unstemmed Measurement and monitoring of nausea severity in emergency department patients: A comparison of scales and exploration of treatment efficacy outcome measures
title_short Measurement and monitoring of nausea severity in emergency department patients: A comparison of scales and exploration of treatment efficacy outcome measures
title_sort measurement and monitoring of nausea severity in emergency department patients: a comparison of scales and exploration of treatment efficacy outcome measures
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/43506