Development of an item bank for measuring prosthetic mobility in people with lower limb amputation: The Prosthetic Limb Users Survey of Mobility (PLUS‐M)

Author:

Hafner Brian J.1ORCID,Amtmann Dagmar1ORCID,Morgan Sara J.123ORCID,Abrahamson Daniel C.4,Askew Robert L.5ORCID,Bamer Alyssa M.1ORCID,Salem Rana1ORCID,Gaunaurd Ignacio A.67ORCID,Gailey Robert S.67ORCID,Czerniecki Joseph M.18ORCID,Fatone Stefania1ORCID,Fergason John R.9,Fothergill Ian10,Kelly Valerie E.1ORCID,Weber Eric L.11,Whiteneck Gale G.12ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine University of Washington Seattle WA USA

2. Research Department Gillette Children's Specialty Healthcare Saint Paul MN USA

3. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine University of Minnesota Minneapolis MN USA

4. Mobile Prosthetic and Orthotic Care Veterans Integrated Service Network 20 VA NW Health Network Seattle WA USA

5. Department of Psychology Stetson University Deland FL USA

6. Department of Physical Therapy University of Miami Miller School of Medicine Coral Gables FL USA

7. Research Service, Bruce W. Carter VA Medical Center Miami FL USA

8. Center for Limb Loss and MoBility VA Puget Sound Health Care System Seattle WA USA

9. Center for the Intrepid, Brooke Army Medical Center San Antonio TX USA

10. Medical Center Orthotics & Prosthetics Silver Spring MD USA

11. Hanger Institute for Clinical Research and Education Austin TX USA

12. Research Department, Craig Hospital Englewood CO USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAchieving mobility with a prosthesis is a common post‐amputation rehabilitation goal and primary outcome in prosthetic research studies. Patient‐reported outcome measures (PROMs) available to measure prosthetic mobility have practical and psychometric limitations that inhibit their use in clinical care and research.ObjectiveTo develop a brief, clinically meaningful, and psychometrically robust PROM to measure prosthetic mobility.DesignA cross‐sectional study was conducted to administer previously developed candidate items to a national sample of lower limb prosthesis users. Items were calibrated to an item response theory model and two fixed‐length short forms were created. Instruments were assessed for readability, effective range of measurement, agreement with the full item bank, ceiling and floor effects, convergent validity, and known groups validity.SettingParticipants were recruited using flyers posted in hospitals and prosthetics clinics across the United States, magazine advertisements, notices posted to consumer websites, and direct mailings.ParticipantsAdult prosthesis users (N = 1091) with unilateral lower limb amputation due to traumatic or dysvascular causes.InterventionsNot applicable.Main Outcome MeasuresCandidate items (N = 105) were administered along with the Patient Reported Outcome Measurement Information System Brief Profile, Prosthesis Evaluation Questionnaire – Mobility Subscale, and Activities‐Specific Balance Confidence Scale, and questions created to characterize respondents.ResultsA bank of 44 calibrated self‐report items, termed the Prosthetic Limb Users Survey of Mobility (PLUS‐M), was produced. Clinical and statistical criteria were used to select items for 7‐ and 12‐item short forms. PLUS‐M instruments had an 8th grade reading level, measured with precision across a wide range of respondents, exhibited little‐to‐no ceiling or floor effects, correlated expectedly with scores from existing PROMs, and differentiated between groups of respondents expected to have different levels of mobility.ConclusionThe PLUS‐M appears to be well suited to measuring prosthetic mobility in people with lower limb amputation. PLUS‐M instruments are recommended for use in clinical and research settings.

Funder

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology,Rehabilitation,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation

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