Psychometric properties of the PROMIS Physical Function item bank in patients receiving physical therapy

被引:40
|
作者
Crins, Martine H. P. [1 ]
van der Wees, Philip J. [2 ]
Klausch, Thomas [3 ]
van Dulmen, Simone A. [2 ]
Roorda, Leo D. [1 ]
Terwee, Caroline B. [3 ]
机构
[1] Amsterdam Rehabil Res Ctr Reade, Amsterdam, Netherlands
[2] Radboud Univ Nijmegen, Med Ctr, IQ Healthcare, Nijmegen, Netherlands
[3] Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Med Ctr, Amsterdam Publ Hlth Res Inst, Dept Epidemiol & Biostat, Amsterdam, Netherlands
来源
PLOS ONE | 2018年 / 13卷 / 02期
关键词
QUESTIONNAIRE DISABILITY INDEX; OUTCOMES MEASUREMENT; REPORTED OUTCOMES; RESPONSE THEORY; R PACKAGE; INFORMATION; QUALITY; FRAMEWORK; IMPROVE;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0192187
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Objectives The Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) is a universally applicable set of instruments, including item banks, short forms and computer adaptive tests (CATs), measuring patient-reported health across different patient populations. PROMIS CATs are highly efficient and the use in practice is considered feasible with little administration time, offering standardized and routine patient monitoring. Before an item bank can be used as CAT, the psychometric properties of the item bank have to be examined. Therefore, the objective was to assess the psychometric properties of the Dutch-Flemish PROMIS Physical Function item bank (DF-PROMIS-PF) in Dutch patients receiving physical therapy. Design Cross-sectional study. Setting and participants 805 patients > 18 years, who received any kind of physical therapy in primary care in the past year, completed the full DF-PROMIS-PF (121 items). Methods Unidimensionality was examined by Confirmatory Factor Analysis and local dependence and monotonicity were evaluated. A Graded Response Model was fitted. Construct validity was examined with correlations between DF-PROMIS-PF T-scores and scores on two legacy instruments (SF-36 Health Survey Physical Functioning scale [SF36-PF10] and the Health Assessment Questionnaire Disability-Index [HAQ-DI]). Reliability (standard errors of theta) was assessed. Results The results for unidimensionality were mixed (scaled CFI = 0.924, TLI = 0.923, RMSEA = 0.045, 1th factor explained 61.5% of variance). Some local dependence was found (8.2% of item pairs). The item bank showed a broad coverage of the physical function construct (threshold-parameters range: -4.28-2.33) and good construct validity (correlation with SF36-PF10 = 0.84 and HAQ-DI = -0.85). Furthermore, the DF-PROMIS-PF showed greater reliability over a broader score-range than the SF36-PF10 and HAQ-DI. Conclusions The psychometric properties of the DF-PROMIS-PF item bank are sufficient. The DF-PROMIS- PF can now be used as short forms or CAT to measure the level of physical function of physiotherapy patients.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Dutch translation and cross-cultural adaptation of the PROMIS® physical function item bank and cognitive pre-test in Dutch arthritis patients
    Martijn AH Oude Voshaar
    Peter M ten Klooster
    Erik Taal
    Eswar Krishnan
    Mart AFJ van de Laar
    Arthritis Research & Therapy, 14
  • [22] Item Response Theory, Computerized Adaptive Testing, and PROMIS: Assessment of Physical Function
    Fries, James F.
    Witter, James
    Rose, Matthias
    Cella, David
    Khanna, Dinesh
    Morgan-DeWitt, Esi
    JOURNAL OF RHEUMATOLOGY, 2014, 41 (01) : 153 - 158
  • [23] Measurement properties of the Dutch–Flemish patient-reported outcomes measurement information system (PROMIS) physical function item bank and instruments: a systematic review
    Inger L. Abma
    Bas J. D. Butje
    Peter M. ten Klooster
    Philip J. van der Wees
    Health and Quality of Life Outcomes, 19
  • [24] Assessment of the psychometric equivalence of the PROMIS® anxiety item bank and its German translation
    Wahl, Inka
    Rutsohn, Joshua
    Cella, David
    Loewe, Bernd
    Rose, Matthias
    Braehler, Elmar
    Pilkonis, Paul
    Schalet, Benjamin
    QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH, 2014, 23 : 59 - 59
  • [25] Dimensionality of the PROMIS Fatigue Item Bank in Patients with Fibromyalgia
    Yost, Kathleen J.
    Waller, Niels G.
    Vincent, Ann
    QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH, 2013, 22
  • [26] Development of the PROMIS Pediatric Physical Activity Item Banks
    Tucker, Carole A.
    Bevans, Katherine B.
    Becker, Brandon D.
    Teneralli, Rachel
    Forrest, Christopher B.
    PHYSICAL THERAPY, 2020, 100 (08): : 1393 - 1410
  • [27] Measurement properties of the Dutch-Flemish patient-reported outcomes measurement information system (PROMIS) physical function item bank and instruments: a systematic review
    Abma, Inger L.
    Butje, Bas J. D.
    ten Klooster, Peter M.
    van der Wees, Philip J.
    HEALTH AND QUALITY OF LIFE OUTCOMES, 2021, 19 (01)
  • [28] Development and psychometric properties of the PROMIS® pediatric fatigue item banks
    Jin-Shei Lai
    Brian D. Stucky
    David Thissen
    James W. Varni
    Esi Morgan DeWitt
    Debra E. Irwin
    Karin B. Yeatts
    Darren A. DeWalt
    Quality of Life Research, 2013, 22 : 2417 - 2427
  • [29] Psychometric Properties of a new PROMIS physical function short form for use in relapsing and progressive multiple sclerosis types
    Kamudoni, Paul
    Johns, Jeffrey
    Salek, Sam
    Amtmann, Dagmar
    Cook, Karon
    Raab, Jana
    Sun, Ying
    Guenther, Oliver
    Middleton, Rod
    Henke, Christian
    QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH, 2019, 28 : S73 - S73
  • [30] More flexible response functions for the PROMIS physical functioning item bank by application of a monotonic polynomial approach
    Carl F. Falk
    Felix Fischer
    Quality of Life Research, 2022, 31 : 37 - 47