| Literature DB >> 24089617 |
Nadia J Luca1, Brian M Feldman.
Abstract
Disease activity refers to potentially reversible aspects of a disease. Measurement of disease activity in paediatric rheumatic diseases is a critical component of patient care and clinical research. Disease activity measures are developed systematically, often involving consensus methods. To be useful, a disease activity measure must be feasible, valid, and interpretable. There are several challenges in quantifying disease activity in paediatric rheumatology; namely, the conditions are multidimensional, the level of activity must be valuated in the context of treatment being received, there is no gold standard for disease activity, and it is often difficult to incorporate the patient's perspective of their disease activity. To date, core sets of response variables are defined for juvenile idiopathic arthritis, juvenile systemic lupus erythematosus, and juvenile dermatomyositis, as well as definitions for improvement in response to therapy. Several specific absolute disease activity measures also exist for each condition. Further work is required to determine the optimal disease activity measures in paediatric rheumatology.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24089617 PMCID: PMC3781994 DOI: 10.1155/2013/715352
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Rheumatol ISSN: 1687-9260
Steps in the development of disease activity measures (adapted from [17, 24, 26, 27]).
| Step | Comments |
|---|---|
| Statement of purpose of measure | Should be explicitly stated a priori |
| Methods of item generation | From the literature, expert opinion, patient opinion, consensus methods |
| Method to identify number of factors or constructs | For example, principal component and factor analysis |
| Derivation sample | Across spectrum of disease activity, academic and community clinics, ideally |
| Clinicians involved | Clinicians deriving criteria should be different than those providing cases/controls |
| Definition of gold standard | Validated set of criteria or expert opinions |
| Technique for selection of final set of items | For example, sensitivity/specificity, ROC curve, and regression models |
| Assessment of psychometric properties | Feasibility, face validity, content validity, reliability, construct validity, and responsiveness |
| External validation of criteria set | Distinct validation sample |
Definitions of domains of measurement properties, adapted from COSMIN taxonomy [28].
| Domain | Measurement property | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Reliability | Internal consistency | The degree of interrelatedness among items |
| Reliability | The proportion of the total variance in measurements which is due to “true” differences among patients | |
| Measurement error | The systematic and random errors of a patient's score that is not attributed to true changes in the construct being measured | |
|
| ||
| Validity | Content validity | The degree to which the content of an instrument is an adequate reflection of the construct to be measured |
| Face validity | The degree to which the items look to be an adequate reflection of the construct to be measured | |
| Construct validity | The degree to which the scores of an instrument are consistent with hypotheses (e.g., relationships to scores of other instruments) based on the assumption that the instrument validly measures the construct to be measured | |
| Criterion validity | The degree to which the scores of an instrument are an adequate reflection of a “gold standard” | |
|
| ||
| Responsiveness | The ability of an instrument to detect change over time in the construct to be measured | |
|
| ||
| Interpretability | The degree to which one can assign qualitative meaning to an instrument's quantitative scores or change in scores | |
Summary of disease activity measures for juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), juvenile systemic lupus erythematosus (JSLE), and juvenile dermatomyositis (JDM).
| JIA | JSLE | JDM | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Relative disease activity measures | |||
| Core response variables (CRV) | ACR [ | PRINTO [ | PRINTO [ |
| Definition of improvement | ≥30% improvement from baseline in 3 of 6 CRVs, with ≤1 CRV worsening by >30% [ | ≥50% improvement from baseline in 2 of 5 CRVs, with ≤1 CRV worsening by >30% [ | PRINTO [ |
| Definition of flare | Worsening of 2 CRV by ≥40% without improvement in >1 CRV by ≥30% [ | ||
|
| |||
| Absolute disease activity measures | |||
| Global disease activity tools | JADAS [ | SLEDAI [ | DAS [ |
| Minimal disease activity (MDA) | MDA [ | ||
| Inactive disease/remission | Wallace criteria [ | PRINTO [ | |
| (5) Physician global assessment indicates no disease activity | |||
ACR: American College of Rheumatology, CHAQ: child health assessment questionnaire, ESR: erythrocyte sedimentation rate, SJIA: systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis, PRINTO: Pediatric Rheumatology International Trials Organization, SLEDAI: systemic lupus erythematosus disease activity index, BILAG: British Isles lupus assessment group index, SLAM: systemic lupus activity measure, ECLAM: European consensus lupus activity measurement, HRQL: health-related quality of life, CHQ: child health questionnaire, IMACS: International Myositis Assessment and Clinical Studies group, JADAS: juvenile arthritis disease activity score, MMT: manual muscle testing, CMAS: childhood myositis assessment scale, DAS: disease activity score, MDAAT: myositis disease activity assessment tool, and CAT: cutaneous assessment tool.