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Construction of a Quality of Life Questionnaire for slowly progressive neuromuscular disease.

Authors :
Dany A
Barbe C
Rapin A
Réveillère C
Hardouin JB
Morrone I
Wolak-Thierry A
Dramé M
Calmus A
Sacconi S
Bassez G
Tiffreau V
Richard I
Gallais B
Prigent H
Taiar R
Jolly D
Novella JL
Boyer FC
Source :
Quality of life research : an international journal of quality of life aspects of treatment, care and rehabilitation [Qual Life Res] 2015 Nov; Vol. 24 (11), pp. 2615-23. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Jul 04.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Purpose: To build a questionnaire to assess health-related quality of life (HRQL) in patients suffering from slowly progressive neuromuscular disease (NMD) using item response theory (IRT).<br />Methods: A pool of 64 items and a validated questionnaire (WHOQOL-BREF) were administered to 159 patients recruited in eight NMD referral centers. Exploratory statistical analysis included methods derived from both IRT and classical test theory.<br />Results: We constructed a questionnaire named QoL-NMD which is composed of two general items and 24 items classified in three domains: (1) "Impact of Physical Symptoms," (2) "Self-perception" and (3) "Activities and Social Participation." Each domain has good psychometric properties (Cronbach's alpha > 0.77, test-retest ICC > 0.81, Loevinger's H > 0.41) and meets IRT assumptions. Comparison with the WHOQOL-BREF enabled assessing similarities and discrepancies with a generic questionnaire.<br />Conclusion: This study enabled the development of a new HRQL questionnaire specifically designed for slowly progressive NMD patients. The QoL-NMD is short enough to be used in clinical practice (26 items). The next steps will be to validate QoL-NMD by re-assessing psychometrics in an independent sample of patients and calibrate the IRT scoring system.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1573-2649
Volume :
24
Issue :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Quality of life research : an international journal of quality of life aspects of treatment, care and rehabilitation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26141500
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11136-015-1013-8