IKDC Subjective Knee Evaluation

The knee-specific subjective component of the International Knee Documentation Committee form set. It measures symptoms, sport-related difficulty and overall knee function as a single normalised score.

Specialties: orthopaedics, sports_medicine, physiotherapy, rheumatology, general_practice | Areas: knee

Time:7 min
Pages:3
Questions:19
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Example Assessment Result

Patient-Reported Outcome Measure

Total Score
72/100
Clinical InterpretationModerate Function
Section 1
Completed (8/10)
Section 2
Completed (7/10)
Remaining sections
All responses submitted
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TimingPre-operative
Date15 Jan 2024

IKDC subjective knee score52
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About the IKDC Subjective Knee Evaluation

The IKDC Subjective Knee Evaluation is one of the most widely used knee-specific patient-reported outcome measures in sports medicine and knee surgery. It captures pain, swelling and giving way, sport-related tasks such as running and jumping, and an overall function rating. Your score is transformed to a 0 to 100 scale where 100 indicates no symptoms and no limitation in daily or sporting activities.

Prevalence:
common

Medical Specialties

Orthopaedics
Sports Medicine
Physiotherapy
Rheumatology
General Practice

Anatomic Areas

Knee

Clinical Indications

Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury And Reconstruction
Meniscal Injury And Repair
Articular Cartilage Lesions
Patellofemoral Disorders
Knee Instability
General Knee Outcome Monitoring In Orthopaedic And Sports Settings

Developer Information

Developed under the International Knee Documentation Committee with participation from AOSSM, ESSKA and regional societies. The subjective form and scoring instructions are maintained for research and clinical documentation consistency.

Copyright & Licensing

Forms and instructions are made available for clinical and research use via orthopaedic and sports medicine society resources (for example AOSSM). Verify current redistribution and registration requirements before commercial or large-scale deployment.

Administration Instructions

Answer each question for the past four weeks, or since your injury if that period is shorter. For symptom items, grade at the highest activity level you believe you could manage without significant symptoms, even if you are not currently active at that level. Item 10a (function before injury) is optional context only and is not used in the IKDC score.

Scoring Methodology

Each response is assigned points so that better function and fewer symptoms receive higher points. Items 2 (pain frequency) and 3 (pain severity) use reverse scoring on the 0 to 10 response line so that favourable answers receive more points. Item 6 scores Yes (locking/catching) as 0 and No as 1. Item 10a (function before injury) is not summed. The eighteen scored items yield a raw total out of 87 when complete. The summary score is (sum of item scores divided by sum of maximum points for answered items) multiplied by 100, rounded to one decimal. When at least sixteen of the eighteen scored items are answered (90% completeness), a score can be calculated using the revised partial scoring rule in the official instructions.

Scoring:
Higher is better

Meaningful Change Threshold

Published literature commonly cites a minimal detectable change of approximately 9 to 15 points and patient-acceptable symptomatic states often exceed the mid-80s on this 0 to 100 scale; exact thresholds should be taken from study context and population.

Score Interpretation

Understanding what your score means

severe impairment

0 - 49

Substantial knee-related limitation, frequent symptoms or difficulty with demanding tasks

moderate impairment

50 - 74

Noticeable symptoms or activity restrictions between sedentary and more demanding sport

near normal

75 - 89

Mild residual symptoms or task limitations; generally high function

normal excellent

90 - 100

Minimal or no limitation; scores approaching 100 indicate absence of symptoms and full function by instrument definition

Clinical Limitations & Considerations

This seed implements the subjective knee questionnaire only, not the full IKDC examination or demographic modules. Scores depend on patient understanding and honest reporting. Cross-cultural adaptations may alter wording slightly. Partial scoring is an approximation; prefer complete forms when possible.

Supporting Literature

Key validation and development studies for the IKDC Subjective Knee Evaluation

  1. 1

    Development and validation of the international knee documentation committee subjective knee form

    Irrgang JJ, Anderson AF, Boland AL, Harner CD, Kurosaka M, Neyret P, Richmond JC, Shelbourne KD

    The American Journal of Sports Medicine, 2001

  2. 2

    Responsiveness of the International Knee Documentation Committee Subjective Knee Form in comparison to the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index, modified Cincinnati Knee Rating System, and Short Form 36 in patients with focal articular cartilage defects

    Noble PC, Scuderi GR, Brekke AC, Sikorskii A, Benjamin JB, Ludewig PM, Berezovka A, Boyle J

    American Journal of Sports Medicine, 2005

Used in Literature

Studies and publications that have used the IKDC Subjective Knee Evaluation

  1. 1

    Measurement properties of the International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) subjective knee form

    Collins NJ, Misra D, Felson DT, Crossley KM, Roos EM

    Arthritis Care & Research, 2011

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