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An international study to develop the EAR-Q patient-reported outcome measure for children and young adults with ear conditions

Authors :
Yiyuan Li
Anna R. Todd
Charlene Rae
Elena Tsangaris
Leila Kasrai
Ken Stewart
Neil W. Bulstrode
David M. Fisher
Mark S. Lloyd
Stefan J. Cano
Ryan Frank
Chunxiao Cui
Beatriz Berenguer
Karen W. Y. Wong Riff
Anne F. Klassen
Yi Wang
Andrea L. Pusic
Ruhong Zhang
Vivek Panchapakesan
John Reinsch
Source :
Journal of Plastic, Reconstructive & Aesthetic Surgery. 74:2341-2348
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Summary Background There is currently a lack of patient-reported outcome measures for ear reconstruction. We developed the EAR-Q to measure ear appearance and post-operative adverse effects from the patient perspective. Methods Field-test data were collected from children and young adults in eight countries between 13 May 2016 and 12 December 2019. Rasch measurement theory (RMT) analysis was used to refine the scales and to examine their psychometric properties. Results Participants had microtia (n = 607), prominent ears (n = 145) or another ear condition (n = 111), and provided 960 assessments for the Appearance scale (e.g., size, shape, photos), and 137 assessments for the Adverse Effects scale (e.g., itchy, painful, numb). RMT analysis led to the reduction of each scale to 10-items. Data fit the Rasch model for the Appearance (X2(80) = 90.9, p = 0.19) and Adverse Effects (X2(20) = 24.5, p = 0.22) scales. All items in each scale had ordered thresholds and good item fit. There was no evidence of differential item function for the Appearance scale by age, gender, language, or type of ear condition. Reliability was high for the Appearance scale, with person separation index (PSI) and Cronbach alpha values with and without extremes ≥0.92. Reliability for the Adverse Effects scale was adequate (i.e., PSI and Cronbach alpha values ≥0.71). Higher scores (liked appearance more) correlated with higher scores (better) on Psychological, Social and School scales. Interpretation The EAR-Q can be used in those 8–29 years of age to understand the patient perspective in clinical practice and research, and in addition, can be used to benchmark outcomes for ear reconstruction internationally.

Details

ISSN :
17486815
Volume :
74
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Plastic, Reconstructive & Aesthetic Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e7847b1dcab47803577fb1e99eaf493f