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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2017 Aug 9.
Published in final edited form as: Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken). 2016 Sep 16;68(10):1390–1401. doi: 10.1002/acr.22936

Table 3.

Examples and potential benefits and pitfalls of outcomes relevant to rheumatology POMs*

Outcome categories Examples Potential benefits Potential pitfalls
Intermediate outcomes C-reactive protein level
Erythrocyte sedimentation rate
Active urinary sediment
Complement studies
Serum urate level
Often more easily captured/standardized than other assessments Influenced by many factors
May not reflect meaningful outcomes to patients or providers
Physician-reported outcomes Swollen joint count
Tender joint count
Disease activity
Functional status
Physician global assessment
Better scores on assessments are often associated with improved long-term clinical outcomes Variable reproducibility, potentially resulting in unreliable performance results
Multiple similar instruments requiring either consensus regarding best metric or additional testing to define consistent results across metrics
Variable burden of data collection
Patient-reported outcomes Patient global assessment
Pain visual analog scale
Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) 29-item health profile and functional assessment
Represent patient-centered outcomes Variable reproducibility, potentially resulting in unreliable performance results
Limited responsiveness data in rheumatic diseases available for newer instruments
Variable burden of data collection
Safety Adverse drug events
Opportunistic infections
Fragility fractures
Patients and providers usually agree they represent serious adverse outcomes May be rare, making it difficult to accurately estimate performance
May be influenced by many factors, making it challenging to attribute to individual provider
Experience with care Access to care
Timeliness of care
Communication
Represent patient-centered outcomes Do not provide information about quality of clinical care
Efficiency Appropriate use of MRI in acute low back pain Emphasizes guideline- concordant care to improve health care efficiency May decrease appropriate as well as inappropriate care
Cost Resource utilization during a discrete episode of care Use with clinical POMs may offer insight into care value (quality/cost) Unclear how to interpret (high cost separated from clinical outcomes is neither good nor bad)
*

POMs =performance outcome measures; MRI =magnetic resonance imaging.