5 results on '"Rog, David"'
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2. Measuring disability in multiple sclerosis: the WHODAS 2.0
- Author
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Young, Carolyn A., Rog, David J., Sharrack, Basil, Constantinescu, Cris, Kalra, Seema, Harrower, Tim, Langdon, Dawn, Tennant, Alan, and Mills, Roger J.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Measuring coping in multiple sclerosis: The Coping Index-MS.
- Author
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Young, Carolyn A, Mills, Roger J, Langdon, Dawn, Rog, David J, Sharrack, Basil, Kalra, Seema, Majeed, Tahir, Footit, David, Harrower, Tim, Nicholas, Richard S, Ford, Helen L, Woolmore, John, Johnstone, Clare, Thorpe, John, Paling, David, Ellis, Cathy, Hanneman, C Oliver, and Tennant, Alan
- Subjects
MULTIPLE sclerosis ,RASCH models - Abstract
Background: Coping in multiple sclerosis (MS) refers to cognitive and behavioural efforts to manage stresses imposed by the illness. Existing generic and disease-specific coping scales do not meet modern guidelines for scale development and cannot produce interval-level metrics to allow for change scores. Objective: The main aim of this study was to develop a brief patient-reported outcome measure for coping in MS, capable of interval-level measurement. Methods: Qualitative work in 43 people with MS leads to a draft scale which was administered to 5747 participants, with longitudinal collection in 2290. A calibration sample of 1000 subjects split into development and validation sets was used to generate three scales consistent with Rasch model expectations. Results: The total Coping Index-MS (CI-MS-T), CI-MS-Internal (CI-MS-I) and CI-MS-External (CI-MS-E) cover total, internal and externally focused coping. All three scales are capable of interval-level measurement. Trajectory analysis of 9000 questionnaires showed two trajectories in CI-MS-T: Group 1 showed a low level of coping with slight decline over 40 months, while Group 2 had a better and stable level of coping due to improving CI-MS-I which compensated for the deteriorating CI-MS-E over time. CI-MS-T < 30 identified group membership at baseline. Conclusion: The CI-MS-T, CI-MS-I and CI-MS-E, comprising 20 items, provide interval-level measurement and are free-for-use in not-for-profit settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Physical and psychological aspects of multiple sclerosis: Revisiting the Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale (MSIS-29)
- Author
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Young, Carolyn A, Rog, David J, Sharrack, Basil, Tanasescu, Radu, Kalra, Seema, Chhetri, Suresh K, Wilde, Lisa, Mills, Roger J, and Tennant, Alan
- Subjects
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RASCH models , *NEUROLOGICAL disorders , *MULTIPLE sclerosis , *PSYCHOLOGICAL factors , *MEASUREMENT errors - Abstract
The MSIS-29 measures the physical and psychological impact of MS.The associations between MSIS-29 domains and demographic/clinical aspects were examined and trajectories analysed over time.Data were collected in the Trajectories of Outcome in Neurological Conditions study for a diverse population of people with MS, with follow-up for up to 5 years. Following Rasch analysis, minimal important change (MIC) was computed for ensuing total, physical and psychological domains.Fit to the Rasch model using data from 5921 participants validated physical, psychological and total domains, and the conversion table transforms raw scores to interval-level metric equivalents. These domains showed significant differences across demographic (age, gender, employment, education, and marital status) and clinical (subtype, treatment, and duration) factors with large effect sizes. The MIC scores were physical: 9.1, total: 14.1, which were both above measurement error, and psychological: 5.5 which was not, so 1.6% of participants reported psychological change which was clinically important but not statistically significant. Trajectory analysis showed three groups, one stable and two with significant slopes, improving and deteriorating.The MSIS-29 has shown adequate fit to the Rasch model after accommodating problems with local item dependency, through a bi-factor solution. The domains showed good discrimination across key factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Multiple Sclerosis vision questionnaire (MSVQ-7): Reliability, validity, precision and discrimination.
- Author
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Young, Carolyn A., Rog, David J., Tanasescu, Radu, Kalra, Seema, Langdon, Dawn, Tennant, Alan, and Mills, Roger J.
- Abstract
• The Rasched Multiple Sclerosis Vision Questionnaire-7 is precise and interval-level. • Visual problems are very common in Multiple Sclerosis, reported by 80% (n = 5478). • Smaller changes in visual symptoms matter more to relapsing than progressive patients. • Visual problems increase depression risk after discounting age, gender and disability. Visual dysfunction is common in people with Multiple Sclerosis (pwMS), associated with a variety of visual symptoms. Capturing the patient experience of these complex patterns of visual pathology is challenging. A valid and reliable patient reported measure, capable of detecting clinically significant change, would have considerable research and clinical benefits. We examined the properties of the MS Vision Questionnaire (MSVQ-7) in a large MS population. Data were collected from participants in the UK-wide Trajectories of Outcome in Neurological Conditions-MS (TONiC-MS) study: MS subtype and Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) band from the clinical team, as well as serial packs including the MSVQ-7 and questionnaires on depression, anxiety and stigma. A calibration sample of 1000 pwMS contributing several years of follow-up were split into training and validation samples for a Confirmatory Factor Analysis and Rasch analysis. The Minimal Detectable Change (MDC) was computed as well as the Minimal Clinically Important Change (MIC), by an anchor-based method, for different MS subtypes. The MSVQ-7 is unidimensional and can be fit to the Rasch model with a solution discarding 3% of variance. Providing all 7 items are answered, the total can be converted to an interval-level metric for calculation of change scores and other parametric analyses. The % of missing values did not exceed 1.7%. Among 5478 pwMS, 80% reported visual problems. MSVQ-7 scores were categorised as mild for 36.1%, moderate for 33.6% and severe for 10.3%, and varied by MS subtype. In the follow-up sample of 2227 pwMS, 42.5% changed MSVQ-7 category between baseline and first follow-up (mean 22.6 months). The MIC exceeded the MDC so clinically significant change exceeds measurement error. While MDC was identical for relapsing and progressive MS, MIC varied by MS subtype, with smaller MIC in relapsing MS. Over one-quarter of the follow-up sample reported a clinically significant change in MSVQ-7: 12.2% improved and 13.5% deteriorated. For pwMS recruited within 2 years of diagnosis, 17.3% reported significant change on follow-up, all improving. MSVQ-7 scores showed strong associations with anxiety, depression and stigma (effect sizes>0.8). Duration, EDSS band and MS subtype all had effect sizes 0.2–0.49. A multinomial logistic regression exploring vision disturbance and depression, adjusted for age, gender, MS subtype, duration and disability, showed vision is the strongest significant predictor of depression. Each unit increase in interval MSVQ-7 increases risk by 10% of 'possible' and by 17% of 'probable' depression. The MSVQ-7 is a brief self-report measure of visual problems for pwMS. It can easily be converted to interval-level measurement for change scores or power calculations and has good precision and discrimination. Visual problems were reported by 80% of pwMS and changed over time, evidencing the need for regular monitoring. MIC varied by MS subtype, indicating that perception of impact changes over the disease course. Visual dysfunction significantly affects depression risk and perceived stigma, highlighting the importance of routine assessment of visual problems in comprehensive care. The MSVQ-7 has strong psychometric properties for adoption as a measure for vision in clinical and research settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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