Validation of a patient-reported outcome measure for giant cell arteritis

Author:

Ndosi Mwidimi12ORCID,Almeida Celia12,Dawson Jill3ORCID,Dures Emma12ORCID,Greenwood Rosemary4ORCID,Bromhead Alison12,Guly Catherine5,Stern Steve12,Hill Catherine67ORCID,Mackie Sarah89ORCID,Robson Joanna C12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Health and Social Wellbeing, University of the West of England , Bristol, UK

2. Academic Rheumatology Unit, Bristol Royal Infirmary, University Hospitals Bristol and Weston NHS Foundation Trust , Bristol, UK

3. Nuffield Department of Population Health (HSRU), University of Oxford , Oxford, UK

4. NIHR Research Design Service South West, University Hospitals Bristol and Weston NHS Foundation Trust , Bristol, UK

5. Bristol Eye Hospital, University Hospitals Bristol and Weston NHS Foundation Trust , Bristol, UK

6. Discipline of Medicine, The University of Adelaide , Adelaide, Australia

7. Rheumatology Unit, Royal Adelaide Hospital , Adelaide, Australia

8. Leeds Institute of Rheumatic and Musculoskeletal Medicine, University of Leeds , Leeds, UK

9. Leeds Biomedical Research Centre, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust , Leeds, UK

Abstract

Abstract Objectives GCA is systemic vasculitis manifesting as cranial, ocular or large vessel vasculitis. A prior qualitative study developed 40 candidate items to assess the impact of GCA on health-related quality of life (HRQoL). This study aimed to determine final scale structure and measurement properties of the GCA patient reported outcome (GCA-PRO) measure. Methods Cross-sectional study included UK patients with clinician-confirmed GCA. They completed 40 candidate items for the GCA-PRO at times 1 and 2 (3 days apart), EQ-5D-5L, ICECAP-A, CAT-PROM5 and self-report of disease activity. Rasch and exploratory factor analyses informed item reduction and established structural validity, reliability and unidimensionality of the final GCA-PRO. Evidence of validity was also established with hypothesis testing (GCA-PRO vs other PRO scores, and between participants with ‘active disease’ vs those ‘in remission’) and test–retest reliability. Results The study population consisted of 428 patients: mean (s.d.) age 74.2 (7.2), 285 (67%) female; 327 (76%) cranial GCA, 114 (26.6%) large vessel vasculitis and 142 (33.2%) ocular involvement. Rasch analysis eliminated 10 candidate GCA items and informed restructuring of response categories into four-point Likert scales. Factor analysis confirmed four domains: acute symptoms (eight items), activities of daily living (seven items), psychological (seven items) and participation (eight items). The overall scale had adequate Rasch model fit (χ2 = 25.219, degrees of freedom = 24, P = 0.394). Convergent validity with EQ5D-5L, ICECAP-A and Cat-PROM5 was confirmed through hypothesis testing. Internal consistency and test–retest reliability were excellent. Conclusion The final GCA-PRO is a 30-item, four-domain scale with robust evidence of validity and reliability in measuring HRQoL in people with GCA.

Funder

National Institute for Health and Care Research, Research for Patient Benefit

NIHR

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Rheumatology

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