S J Bowman1, J Hamburger, A Richards, R J Barry, S Rauz. 1. Department of Rheumatology, University Hospital Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust (Selly Oak), Raddlebarn Road, Birmingham B296JD, UK. simon.bowman@uhb.nhs.uk
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The long-form 64-item Profile of Fatigue and Discomfort--Sicca Symptoms Inventory (PROFAD-SSI) questionnaire was developed as a patient-reported assessment tool for use in primary SS (PSS) and other rheumatic disorders. In this study, we assess whether the (shorter and more practical) 19-item PROFAD-SSI-SF (short form) gives similar results and whether a still briefer version using visual analogue scales (VASs) is feasible. METHODS: Questionnaire surveys comprising the long and short versions of the PROFAD-SSI were mailed to 43 patients with PSS and 50 patients with RA, who were asked to complete these contemporaneously as well as repeating the process 1 month later. PSS patients also completed a series of VASs comprising fatigue and sicca domains of the SSI. RESULTS: Surveys were returned from 35 PSS patients and 35 RA patients. All domains of the long- and short-form PROFAD-SSI showed strong correlations (Spearman rho between 0.779 and 0.996, P < 0.01). Factor analysis generally confirmed the previously validated domain structure with Cronbach's alpha = 0.99. The PROFAD-SF somatic fatigue domain correlated more strongly with a fatigue VAS than did the mental fatigue domain. The SSI-SF domain scores correlated with equivalent VAS scores. CONCLUSION: The long- and short-form PROFAD-SSI questionnaires correlate closely suggesting that the PROFAD-SF is valid as an outcome tool. Preliminary data also suggest that an even briefer form with compression of the domains into single VAS is also feasible.
OBJECTIVES: The long-form 64-item Profile of Fatigue and Discomfort--Sicca Symptoms Inventory (PROFAD-SSI) questionnaire was developed as a patient-reported assessment tool for use in primary SS (PSS) and other rheumatic disorders. In this study, we assess whether the (shorter and more practical) 19-item PROFAD-SSI-SF (short form) gives similar results and whether a still briefer version using visual analogue scales (VASs) is feasible. METHODS: Questionnaire surveys comprising the long and short versions of the PROFAD-SSI were mailed to 43 patients with PSS and 50 patients with RA, who were asked to complete these contemporaneously as well as repeating the process 1 month later. PSSpatients also completed a series of VASs comprising fatigue and sicca domains of the SSI. RESULTS: Surveys were returned from 35 PSSpatients and 35 RApatients. All domains of the long- and short-form PROFAD-SSI showed strong correlations (Spearman rho between 0.779 and 0.996, P < 0.01). Factor analysis generally confirmed the previously validated domain structure with Cronbach's alpha = 0.99. The PROFAD-SF somatic fatigue domain correlated more strongly with a fatigue VAS than did the mental fatigue domain. The SSI-SF domain scores correlated with equivalent VAS scores. CONCLUSION: The long- and short-form PROFAD-SSI questionnaires correlate closely suggesting that the PROFAD-SF is valid as an outcome tool. Preliminary data also suggest that an even briefer form with compression of the domains into single VAS is also feasible.
Authors: Anastasia Secco; Lucila Marino; Natalia Herscovich; Pedro Aicardi; Lorena Techera; Lorena Takashima; María Lida Santiago; Felix Romanini; Marta Mamani; Antonio C Catalán Pellet Journal: Eur J Rheumatol Date: 2019-12-16
Authors: Weini Xin; Katherine Chiu Man Leung; Edward Chin Man Lo; Mo Yin Mok; Moon Ho Leung Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health Date: 2020-05-21 Impact factor: 3.390
Authors: Julia L Newton; James Frith; Danielle Powell; Kate Hackett; Katharine Wilton; Simon Bowman; Elizabeth Price; Colin Pease; Jacqueline Andrews; Paul Emery; John Hunter; Monica Gupta; Saravanan Vadivelu; Ian Giles; David Isenberg; Peter Lanyon; Adrian Jones; Marian Regan; Annie Cooper; Robert Moots; Nurhan Sutcliffe; Michele Bombardieri; Costantino Pitzalis; John McLaren; Steven Young-Min; Bhaskar Dasgupta; Bridget Griffiths; Dennis Lendrem; Sheryl Mitchell; Wan-Fai Ng Journal: Ann Rheum Dis Date: 2012-05-05 Impact factor: 19.103