Validity of Combining History Elements and Physical Examination Tests to Diagnose Patellofemoral Pain

Archives of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation
April 2018 Volume 99, Issue 4, Pages 607–614.e1
Simon Décary, PT, PhD

Abstract
Objective
To assess the validity of diagnostic clusters combining history elements and physical examination tests to diagnose or exclude patellofemoral pain (PFP).

Design
Prospective diagnostic study.

Settings
Orthopedic outpatient clinics, family medicine clinics, and community-dwelling.

Participants
Consecutive patients (N=279) consulting one of the participating orthopedic surgeons (n=3) or sport medicine physicians (n=2) for any knee complaint.

Interventions
Not applicable.

Main Outcome Measures
History elements and physical examination tests were obtained by a trained physiotherapist blinded to the reference standard: a composite diagnosis including both physical examination tests and imaging results interpretation performed by an expert physician. Penalized logistic regression (least absolute shrinkage and selection operator) was used to identify history elements and physical examination tests associated with the diagnosis of PFP, and recursive partitioning was used to develop diagnostic clusters. Diagnostic accuracy measures including sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values, and positive and negative likelihood ratios with associated 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were calculated.

Results
Two hundred seventy-nine participants were evaluated, and 75 had a diagnosis of PFP (26.9%). Different combinations of history elements and physical examination tests including the age of participants, knee pain location, difficulty descending stairs, patellar facet palpation, and passive knee extension range of motion were associated with a diagnosis of PFP and used in clusters to accurately discriminate between individuals with PFP and individuals without PFP. Two diagnostic clusters developed to confirm the presence of PFP yielded a positive likelihood ratio of 8.7 (95% CI, 5.2–14.6) and 3 clusters to exclude PFP yielded a negative likelihood ratio of .12 (95% CI, .06–.27).

Conclusions
Diagnostic clusters combining common history elements and physical examination tests that can accurately diagnose or exclude PFP compared to various knee disorders were developed. External validation is required before clinical use.

Journal Reference

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