Assess knee function & activity level, such as patients with knee ligament injuries (commonly ACL tears) or post surgery
Audience: PATIENT
Published by EVAL Foundation
Revision 1 · Published June 23, 2026
Marx, Robert G., et al. “Development and evaluation of an activity rating scale for disorders of the knee.” The American journal of sports medicine 29.2 (2001): 213-218.
The Marx Activity Rating Scale was developed by Robert G. Marx, MD, an orthopedic surgeon specializing in shoulder and knee surgery. Dr. Marx practices at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York where he is the Director of the Foster Center for Clinical Outcomes Research. As director of the Foster Center, Dr. Marx is involved in research that aims to improve patient care. You can visit his website at https://www.robertmarxmd.com/
The Marx Scale is a patient-reported outcome measure used in orthopedic and sports medicine to assess knee function and activity level, particularly in patients with knee ligament injuries (most commonly ACL tears) or those who have undergone knee reconstruction surgery. It's a concise but meaningful tool for understanding how well a patient has returned to the dynamic, high-load activities that truly test knee function. It is not a pain scale — it measures activity participation, not symptoms
The Four Activities Scored:
Each of the four activities is rated on a 4-point frequency scale:
0 = Less than once a month
1 = One time in a month
2 = One time in a week
3 = 2 or 3 times in a week
4 = 4 or more times in a week
The four activities are:
Running
Cutting (changing direction while moving)
Deceleration (stopping quickly)
Pivoting (rotating on a planted foot)
Total score ranges from 0–16, with higher scores reflecting greater activity level and better functional knee performance.
Key features:
It asks patients to report on the highest frequency at which they performed each activity in their healthiest state in the past year, which provides a realistic functional baseline
It is brief and easy to administer — just four questions
It captures high-demand athletic movements that are particularly relevant to ACL function and rotational knee stability
It is not a pain scale — it measures activity participation, not symptoms
Clinical use:
Widely used to evaluate outcomes after ACL reconstruction
Helps determine whether a patient has returned to sport or pre-injury activity levels
Used alongside other tools like the IKDC, Lysholm Scale, or KOOS for a more complete picture of knee function
Useful for tracking progress through rehabilitation over time
Strengths:
Simple, quick, and validated
Focuses on functionally demanding movements relevant to knee stability
Good for comparing pre- and post-surgical activity levels
Limitations:
Does not capture pain, swelling, or other symptoms
May not reflect activity limitations in older or less athletic populations
Self-reported frequency can be subject to recall bias
Original and Validation Literature:
Marx, Robert G., et al. “Development and evaluation of an activity rating scale for disorders of the knee.” The American journal of sports medicine 29.2 (2001): 213-218.
Additional Literature:
Collins, Natalie J., et al. “Measures of knee function: International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) Subjective Knee Evaluation Form, Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS), Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score Physical Function Short Form (KOOS‐PS), Knee Outcome Survey Activities of Daily Living Scale (KOS‐ADL), Lysholm Knee Scoring Scale, Oxford Knee Score (OKS), Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC), Activity Rating Scale (ARS), and Tegner Activity Score (TAS).” Arthritis care & research 63.S11 (2011).
Kanakamedala, Ajay C., Allen F. Anderson, and James J. Irrgang. “IKDC Subjective Knee Form and Marx Activity Rating Scale are suitable to evaluate all orthopaedic sports medicine knee conditions: a systematic review.” Journal of ISAKOS: Joint Disorders & Orthopaedic Sports Medicine (2016): jisakos-2015.
Current: Revision 1
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