Relevance of medical comorbidities for functional mobility in people with limb loss: retrospective explanatory models for a clinical walking measure and a patient-reported functional outcome

Abstract

Objectives

Various modifiable and non-modifiable factors affect functional mobility, but subjective patient-reported and objective performance-based measures are rarely combined in explanatory analyses of functional mobility in people with limb loss. This study determined separate explanatory models for patient-reported function using the Prosthetic Evaluation Questionnaire Mobility Subscale (PEQ-MS), and performance-based 2-Minute Walk Test (2MWT).

Design

Retrospective cross-sectional observational analysis.

Setting

Wellness-walking program.

Participants

Three hundred five volunteers with lower limb loss participated. Sixty nine percent were men, mean age 56 (15) years. Fifty two percent had vascular amputation causes, 42% had surgical levels above the knee, and 82% had medical comorbidities. Walking levels included limited-household (21%), limited-community (30%), and independent-community (49%). Outcome measures included patient-reported PEQ-MS, Activities-specific Balance Confidence (ABC) and Houghton scales; and performance-based balance and walking.

Main outcomes

Separate PEQ-MS and 2MWT multiple regression models fit using backward deletion.

Results

Modifiable (balance ability, ABC, Houghton score; P < 0.05) and non-modifiable factors (sex, amputation cause, surgical level; P < 0.05) explained the variance in 2MWT (adjusted R2 = 0.685). Patient-reported and performance-based modifiable factors (Houghton score, 2MWT; P < 0.001) explained PEQ-MS variance (adjusted R2 = 0.660). Integumentary (P = 0.022) and cardiopulmonary (P < 0.001) comorbidities explained an additional 4% of PEQ-MS variance, while surgical level was insignificant.

Conclusions

Both modifiable and non-modifiable factors explained prosthetic functional mobility. Performance-based walking was explained by modifiable factors including balance ability and confidence, prosthesis and walking aid use. Patient-reported function was also explained by prosthesis and walking aid use, walking speed and medical comorbidities. Modifiable factors for objective and subjective prosthetic mobility may provide a clinical roadmap for rehabilitation.

Citation

Relevance of medical comorbidities for functional mobility in people with limb loss: retrospective explanatory models for a clinical walking measure and a patient-reported functional outcome