1. Comparison of <scp>Patient‐Reported</scp> Outcomes Measurement Information System Computerized Adaptive Testing Versus Fixed Short Forms in Juvenile Myositis
- Author
-
Valeria G. Esparza, Rowland W. Chang, Bryce B. Reeve, Jin Shei Lai, Elizabeth Gray, David Cella, Ruchi N. Patel, and Kaveh Ardalan
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Short Forms ,Standard error ,McNemar's test ,Rheumatology ,Physical therapy ,medicine ,Stopping rules ,Juvenile ,Anxiety ,Computerized adaptive testing ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Myositis - Abstract
OBJECTIVE Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System® (PROMIS® ) measures can be administered via computerized adaptive testing (CAT) or fixed short forms (FSF), but the empirical benefits of CAT versus FSF are unknown in juvenile myositis (JM). This study assesses if PROMIS CAT is feasible, precise, correlated with FSF, and less prone to respondent burden and floor/ceiling effects than FSF in JM. METHODS Patients 8-17 yo (self-report and parent proxy) and parents of patients 5-7 yo (only parent proxy) completed PROMIS Fatigue, Pain Interference, Upper Extremity Function, Mobility, Anxiety and Depressive Symptoms measures. Pearson correlations, paired t-tests, and Cohen's D were calculated between PROMIS CAT and FSF. McNemar test assessed floor/ceiling effects between CAT and FSF. Precision and respondent burden were examined across the T-score range. RESULTS Data from 67 patient-parent dyads were analyzed. CAT and FSF mean scores did not significantly differ except in parent proxy Anxiety and Fatigue (effect size: 0.23 and 0.19, respectively). CAT had less pronounced floor/ceiling effects at the less symptomatic extreme in all domains except self-report Anxiety. Increased item burden and higher standard errors were seen in less symptomatic scorers for CAT. Modified stopping rules limiting CAT item administration did not decrease precision. CONCLUSION PROMIS CAT appears to be feasible and correlated with FSF. CAT had less pronounced floor/ceiling effects, allowing detection of individual differences in less symptomatic patients. Modified stopping rules for CAT may decrease respondent burden. CAT can be considered for long-term follow-up of JM patients.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF