Literature DB >> 24626652

Acne-specific quality of life questionnaire (Acne-QoL): translation, cultural adaptation and validation into Brazilian-Portuguese language.

Cristhine de Souza Leão Kamamoto1, Karime Marques Hassun2, Ediléia Bagatin3, Jane Tomimori4.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: many studies about the psychosocial impact of acne have been reported in international medical literature describing quality of life as a relevant clinical outcome. It is well known that the patient's perception about the disease may be different from the physician's evaluation. Therefore, it is important to use validated instruments that turn the patient's subjective opinion into objective information.
OBJECTIVES: to translate into Brazilian-Portuguese language and to culturally adapt a quality of life questionnaire, the Acne-Specific Quality of Life Questionnaire (Acne-QoL), as well as to evaluate its reliability and validity.
METHODS: measurement properties were assessed: 1) validity: comparison between severity and Acne-QoL domain scores, correlations between acne duration and Acne-QoL domain scores, and correlation between Acne-QoL domain scores and SF-36 components; 2) internal consistency: Cronbach's α coefficient; 3) test-retest reproducibility: intraclass correlation coefficient and Wilcoxon test.
RESULTS: Eighty subjects with a mean age of 20.5 ± 4.8 years presenting mild (33.8%), moderate (36.2%) and severe (30%) facial acne were enrolled. Acne-QoL domain scores were similar among the different acne severity groups except for role-social domain. Subjects with shorter acne duration presented significant higher scores. Acne-QoL domains showed significant correlations, both between themselves and with SF-36 role-social and mental health components. Internal consistency (0.925-0.952) and test-retest reproducibility were considered acceptable (0.768-0.836).
CONCLUSIONS: the Brazilian-Portuguese version of the Acne-QoL is a reliable and valid satisfactory outcome measure to be used in facial acne studies.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24626652      PMCID: PMC3938358          DOI: 10.1590/abd1806-4841.20142172

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  An Bras Dermatol        ISSN: 0365-0596            Impact factor:   1.896


INTRODUCTION

Acne vulgaris is probably one of the most common skin conditions affecting the general population, especially teenagers and young adults.[1] A Brazilian survey revealed that 59.4% of men and 54% of women had acne, which means that this is the most prevailing dermatosis at all age ranges from 18 to 55, with a prevalence varying from 70.3% to 38.1%.[1-4] It is estimated that, in the United States, 45 million people have acne. Although acne vulgaris does not usually compromise general health, consistent studies have demonstrated that it may cause a negative impact on patient's quality of life, with psychological, social wellbeing, and functional abnormalities such as depression, anxiety, anger, low self-esteem, discomfort with self-appearance, embarrassment, self-consciousness, lowered self-concept, social withdrawal, including suicidal ideation, as well as negative influence on school and work performance. Therefore, the assessment of the interaction between acne, emotional issues and psyche is crucial to avoid severe damage.[5-12] Recent studies have noticed the negative impact of acne on medical students, as well as significant associations between suicidal ideation, mental health problems, social impairment, and adolescents with acne.[12-13] In a previous case-control study, patients with facial acne reported a greater impact on psychological, social and functional capacity domains of the generic questionnaire Sickness Impact Profile (SIP), when compared to patients without acne.[14] Some authors have observed that acne causes more impact on mental health than other chronic diseases such as asthma, epilepsy and diabetes when using the Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short Form Health Survey (SF-36).[15] However, disease-specific scales are more accurate than the generic ones in detecting alterations in individual health status.[16,17] Several acne-specific psychometric instruments have been developed, such as: Acne Disability Index (ADI) (UK, 1989), Acne-Specific Quality of Life Questionnaire (Acne-QoL) (USA, 1996), Assessment of the Psychological and Social Effects of Acne (APSEA) (UK, 1997), Dermatology-Specific Quality of Life Instrument for Acne (DSQL - AC) (USA, 1997) and Acne Quality of Life (AQOL) (Canada, 1998).[18-25] The Acne-QoL was the first validated disease-specific questionnaire suitable for use in facial acne clinical trials to have its psychometric properties (reliability, validity and responsiveness) soundly documented. Its development was based on questions suggested by subjects with acne who were evaluated during the item generation, item reduction, and pilot testing. In the last decades, several efforts have been made to develop psychometric tools to be used as efficacy parameters in randomized and controlled dermatological clinical trials.[26-29] Authors have been encouraged to use health-related quality of life (HRQoL) measuring scales recommended by the American and European regulatory agencies.[27,30] There is a paucity of Brazilian data regarding validated acne-specific HRQoL instruments. Taking into account the relevance of globalization and of the information concerning acne-specific HRQoL studies, and based on the rising demand for translated instruments, the purpose of this pioneer study consists of translating and adapting the Acne-QoL into Brazilian-Portuguese language, creating the Brazilian-Portuguese version of the Acne-QoL (Acne-QoL-Br) and providing further evidence of its reliability and validity.

MATERIAL AND METHODS

Translation and cultural adaptation

The choice for the Acne-QoL was based on the absence, in the Brazilian literature, of acne-specific instruments focusing on clinical and epidemiological trials with a well-founded methodology and whose questions have been generated by subjects' reports. Initially, the permission to use and translate Acne-QoL was requested to the authors who developed the questionnaire. Furthermore, conditions concerning its translation and use were fulfilled in accordance with authors' orientations and internationally accepted standards. The committee which revised the translations and back-translations analyzed in this study was formed by an English teacher and five bilingual dermatologists, one of them being the principal investigator. The general concept was maintained, as well as the item level of understanding, prioritizing the semantic and conceptual equivalences. Finally, approval of the final English and Brazilian-Portuguese versions of the Acne-QoL was obtained from the authors.

Study design

This cross-sectional study was conducted at the Department of Dermatology Clinic in Escola Paulista de Medicina of the Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Brazil. It was approved by the Institutional Review Board of the Escola Paulista de Medicina of the Universidade Federal de São Paulo and has therefore been performed in accordance with Declaration of Helsinki (1964) and Good Clinical Practice. Moreover, all subjects gave their informed consent prior to their inclusion in the study, and the term of informed and voluntary consent was considered adequate and therefore accepted. All patients were recruited as they presented or were referred for facial acne care. The study was carried out from July 2007 to July 2009. Male and female subjects (13 to 35 years old) with facial acne (classified into mild, moderate or severe, according to the classification proposed by the American Academy of Dermatology) from any race were enrolled.[31] The subjects answered the Acne-QoL-Br and SF-36 questionnaires at the beginning of the study (baseline visit). Seven days later (second visit), they returned to retest and answered the Acne-QoL-Br prior starting therapy. Subjects who had received acne topical treatment in the last four weeks and/or systemic treatment in the last three months prior to baseline were excluded. The other exclusion criteria are defined in the flowchart (Figure 1).
FIGURE 1

Flowchart of the study population (N =80) and the exclusion criteria

Flowchart of the study population (N =80) and the exclusion criteria The Acne-QoL contains 19 questions organized into four domains (self-perception, role-social, roleemotional, and acne symptoms) which refer to facial acne. For all domains, higher scores reflect better HRQoL. The total score varies from zero to 114, distributed as follows: 0- 30 (self-perception), 0-24 (role-social), 0-30 (role-emotional), and 0-30 (acne symptoms).

Reliability

The internal consistency of the questionnaire at all and every domain was assessed by Cronbach's α coefficient. The presence of redundancy was also evaluated. The test-retest reproducibility was assessed by the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) for each domain and by comparison between subjects' answers at baseline and second visit.

Validity

The validity of the questionnaire was measured by: i) content validity, ii) discriminative validity, assessed by the comparison between Acne-QoL-Br domain scores and facial acne severity using analysis of variance (ANOVA) and by the correlation between Acne-QoL-Br domain scores and acne duration using Pearson's correlation coefficient, and iii) convergent validity, assessed by the evaluation of the correlation of Acne-QoL-Br domain scores with themselves and with SF-36 domain scores using Spearman's correlation coefficient.

Statistical Analysis

The Kolmogorov-Smirnov normality test was used to evaluate continuous and semi-continuous data. In order to compare groups, chi-square, Student's t (non-paired), Wilcoxon and analysis of the variance (ANOVA) tests were used. As for the evaluation of the degree of association between groups, Pearson's and Spearman's correlation coefficients were used. A probability level equal or lower than 5% (p < 0.05) was considered significant. The sample number was established non-probabilistically. The statistical analysis was performed by the Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) software, version 13.0 for Windows, SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL).

RESULTS

Translation and pilot study

The committee evaluated two independent versions translated from English into Brazilian-Portuguese, resulting in the first Portuguese version (V1P). This version was submitted to two back-translations that were unified, resulting in the first English language version (V1E). After a pilot test including 22 subjects, some modifications in items 3,14,15,16 and 17 were necessary in the second Portuguese version (V2P). Nevertheless, no significant alteration was observed when comparing V2P to the original English version. The V1E and V2P were analyzed and accepted by the authors of the questionnaire, and the AcneQoL-Br was created (see flowchart on Figure 2).
FIGURE 2

Flowchart of the translation and cultural adaptation of the Acne Specific Quality of Life Questionnaire (Acne-QoL) into Brazilian-Portuguese language

Flowchart of the translation and cultural adaptation of the Acne Specific Quality of Life Questionnaire (Acne-QoL) into Brazilian-Portuguese language

Study population

We recruited 114 subjects, but 34 did not fulfill the inclusion and exclusion criteria (Figure 1). The study population comprised 80 subjects (52.5% female, 47.5% male; mean age 20.5 ± 4.8 years; mean acne duration 6.6 ± 4.4 years) who presented facial acne, as shown in table 1.
TABLE 1

Clinical and demographic characteristics of the study population (N=80).

Characteristics n %
Age (years)   
Mean (SD)20.5 (4.8) 
Range13 - 35 
Gender   
Female4252.5
Race   
Non-Caucasian5164.0
Acne duration (years)   
Mean (SD)6.6 (4.4) 
Range0.3 - 21 
Acne vulgaris classification (AAD)   
Mild2733.8
Moderate2936.2
Severe2430.0

Legend: SD = standard deviation; AAD = American Academy of Dermatology

Clinical and demographic characteristics of the study population (N=80). Legend: SD = standard deviation; AAD = American Academy of Dermatology Mean Acne-QoL-Br score was 46.86 ± 22.21, and mean domain scores were 12.43 ± 7.19 (self-perception), 12.28 ± 6.93 (role-social), 11.00 ± 6.60 (role-emotional), and 11.16 ± 5.11 (acne symptoms). Mean SF-36 domain scores were 93.72 ± 12.85 (physical functioning), 89.74 ± 23.64 (role-physical), 77.45 ± 22.00 (bodily pain), 74.15 ±22.97 (general health), 66.47 ± 16.77 (vitality), 71.63 ± 24.31 (rolesocial), 67.95 ±38.53 (role-emotional), and 66.87 ± 18+41 (mental health). Eighty subject responses to Acne-QoL-Br were analyzed at baseline and a total of 42 subjects were retested. The internal consistency of the 19 Acne-QoL-Br items (Cronbach's α coefficient = 0.925) and of its four domains were considered satisfactory (Table 2). After excluding one question, no significant increase in Cronbach's α coefficient was observed for each item in relation to the whole questionnaire (Table 3). The ICC was considered acceptable in all domains and the response values were similar for subjects who came seven days after baseline to retest (Table 2 and 4).
TABLE 2

Reliability and validity analysis of the final 19-item Acne-QoL-Br

  C N Self-perception Role-social Role-emotional Acne symptoms
Internal consistencyα800.8520.8790.7640.692
Test-retest reproducibilityICC420.8360.7820.7950.768
Content validityα800.8520.8790.7640.692
Acne duration (years)r80-0.203-0.200-0.3336*-0.2416*
Convergent validity SF-36 domains
Physical functioningR 0.1860.106-0.0170.082
Role-physicalR 0.0640.064-0.168-0.207
Bodily painR 0.1070.1470.0330.042
General healthR -0.0290.053-0.195-0.093
VitalityR 0.1340.2080.0860.036
Social functioningR 0.456*0.386*0.258*0.225*
Role-emotionalR 0.1740.042-0.0650.083
Mental healthR 0.265*0.235*0.1830.056

Legend: Acne-QoL-Br = Brazilian-Portuguese version of acne-specific quality of life questionnaire; C = correlation coefficient; α = Cronbach's coefficient; ICC = intraclass correlation coefficient; r = Pearson's correlation coefficient; R = Spearman's correlation coefficient.

p < 0.05

TABLE 3

Redundancy analysis after the exclusion of one item from the Acne-QoL-Br

Item      α
1 0.923
2 0.917
3 0.920
4 0.921
5 0.927
6 0.919
7 0.920
8 0.921
9 0.924
10 0.918
11 0.920
12 0.918
13 0.918
14 0.921
15 0.925
16 0.922
17 0.926
18 0.922
19 0.925

Legend: Acne-QoL-Br = Brazilian-Portuguese version of acne-specific quality of life questionnaire; α = Cronbach's coefficient

TABLE 4

Comparison of Acne-QoL-Br domain scores between test and retest after seven days without any treatment

Domain Test Retest p
  P25 Median P75 P25 Median P75  
Self-perception791479200.063
Role-social6912610190.333
Role-emotional7915613160.362
Acne symptoms711151114190.069

Legend: Acne-QoL-Br = Brazilian-Portuguese version of acne-specific quality of life questionnaire; P = percentile

p < 0.05

Reliability and validity analysis of the final 19-item Acne-QoL-Br Legend: Acne-QoL-Br = Brazilian-Portuguese version of acne-specific quality of life questionnaire; C = correlation coefficient; α = Cronbach's coefficient; ICC = intraclass correlation coefficient; r = Pearson's correlation coefficient; R = Spearman's correlation coefficient. p < 0.05 Redundancy analysis after the exclusion of one item from the Acne-QoL-Br Legend: Acne-QoL-Br = Brazilian-Portuguese version of acne-specific quality of life questionnaire; α = Cronbach's coefficient Comparison of Acne-QoL-Br domain scores between test and retest after seven days without any treatment Legend: Acne-QoL-Br = Brazilian-Portuguese version of acne-specific quality of life questionnaire; P = percentile p < 0.05 The correlations between SF-36 role-social and mental health components and Acne-QoL-Br domains were considered statistically significant (Table 2). Acne-QoL-Br components showed strong statistically significant correlations, both between themselves and with total Acne-QoL-Br score (Table 5).
TABLE 5

Correlations among Acne-QoL-Br domain scores

Domain Self-perception Role-social Role-emotional Acne symptoms
Self-perception1.000   
Role-social0.714*1.000  
Role-emotional0.611*0.526*1.000 
Acne symptoms0.575*0.573*0.561*1.000
Total score0.877*0.S5S*0.775*0.794*

Legend: Spearman coefficient;

p <0.05

Correlations among Acne-QoL-Br domain scores Legend: Spearman coefficient; p <0.05

Analysis of clinical data

An analysis of acne duration and severity was performed for all subjects. Mean scores for Acne-QoL-Br self-perception, role-emotional and acne symptoms domains were similar in all acne severity groups. However, a significant difference was observed in the role-social domain, since patients with mild facial acne presented higher scores than patients with moderate acne (p < 0.05). No difference in mean scores was observed between patients with mild facial acne and those with severe acne, as well as between patients with moderate acne and those with severe acne (Table 6).
TABLE 6

Descriptive analysis between Acne-QoL-Br domain scores and acne severity according to AAD classification

Domain Mild Moderate Severe p
  N Mean SD N Mean SD N Mean SD  
Self-perception8015880117801160.168
Role-social8015780108801260.040*
Role-emotional8011780115801170.908
Acne symptoms8012580116801150.584

Legend: Acne-QoL-Br = Brazilian-Portuguese version of acne-specific quality of life questionnaire; AAD = American Academy of Dermatology

p < 0.05

Descriptive analysis between Acne-QoL-Br domain scores and acne severity according to AAD classification Legend: Acne-QoL-Br = Brazilian-Portuguese version of acne-specific quality of life questionnaire; AAD = American Academy of Dermatology p < 0.05 The subjects who experienced shorter acne duration presented significant higher role-emotional and acne symptoms domain scores, as well as marginal correlations between role-social and self-perception domain scores (Table 2).

DISCUSSION

The purpose of this study was to translate and validate a Brazilian disease-specific instrument for quality of life assessment in acne patients. The results of this study corroborate that the Acne-QoL-Br is a reliable and valid instrument to assess HRQoL in facial acne studies. We followed the translation guidance, cultural adaptation techniques, and psychometric analysis methods suggested by the authors who designed the Acne-QoL and conducted subsequent studies.[19-21] The questions 3,14,15,16 and 17 were slightly altered to reach conceptual and semantic equivalences. However, there were no significant structural alterations in the items and in the response numerical scale. The study population was composed by passive search for subjects with facial acne. This approach may be the reason why our sample did not show the usual distribution as reported in cross-sectional studies concerning severity, age and sex prevalence.[32,33] In this study, the Cronbach's α coefficient values reflected an adequate level of internal consistency of the 19 Acne-QoL-Br items, in accordance with Fehnel et al. [21] The social domain demonstrated the highest equivalence, and the acne symptoms domain score was lower than that of other domains. Although the coefficient was within the expected ranges, the smallest capacity of homogeneity noticed in the acne symptoms domain also occurred in studies that analyzed the measurement properties of the original instrument.[21,23,25] No redundancy was observed in the Acne-QoL-Br, since there was no significant alteration in Cronbach's α coefficients in the absence of one item. Thus, in order to obtain a more trustworthy interpretation of instrument stability, Acne-QoL-Br reproducibility was evaluated by the similarity of subject responses at baseline and retest, as described in a previous study.[20] ICC values presented an acceptable and satisfactory variation, which means that the AcneQoL-Br was considered reproducible. The ICC for the acne symptoms domain showed the lowest value, probably because the items of this domain refer to some aspects which allow a slight variation in subject's perception of facial acne lesions and sequelae.[21,24,25] This perception may be heightened or lessened. The dynamic and polymorphic behavior of facial acne and the motivation generated from knowing that the treatment would be prescribed after the second interview are factors that need to be taken into account. Such findings indicated that items related to facial acne were stable, since it did not get better or worse during the period between the two interviews. Anderson and Rajagopalan used the ICC to assess test-retest reliability, with an interval from three to seven days, obtaining good results.[23] Unlike this study, other validation studies of acne-specific questionnaires used Pearson's and Spearman's correlation coefficients to determine test-retest reliability.[22,25] The ideal interval for retest application of the Acne-QoL-Br was seven days, ratifying the interval established by the original instrument and those used in other studies, i.e., equal or smaller than seven days.[19-21,23] A previous study that used a more comprehensive and complete methodology (including ICC, Pearson's coefficient, and Student's test) was carried out by a French group, but nevertheless included a small group of sixteen subjects. The authors decided to use the Cardiff Acne Disability Index (CADI), which may not be considered gold standard for clinical trials.[34] During the validation phase of this study, a lack of correlation between facial acne severity and quality of life was observed, confirming the results from Martin et al, except for the Acne-QoL-Br role-social domain, in which subjects with mild facial acne presented higher scores and therefore better quality of life than those with moderate facial acne.[20] The association between HRQoL questionnaire scores and acne severity is still controversial, according to studies involving specific instruments, which observed that HRQoL evaluation was more consistently correlated with the severity perceived by the subject than with that described by the investigator.[20] Some studies have documented a significant correlation, while others have reported none or weak correlations.[18,22,23,25,35] Our findings support the hypothesis that, even for subjects with mild acne, the disease may undermine their selfconfidence, limit public appearances, and impair family and work relationships.[36] In accordance with some studies, the results of Acne-QoL-Br validity demonstrated a negative correlation between the scores and how long the subject has had acne in role-emotional and acne symptoms domains, and a marginal correlation for other domains, i.e., subjects with shorter duration experienced better quality of life.[29] Layton et al reported that women, mainly those who have had acne for more than ten years, presented higher level of compromise in HRQoL as assessed by APSEA.[22] In addition, in a cohort study with 867 subjects followed up for two years, Tan et al proved that subjects with the highest levels of compromise on quality of life evaluated by the Acne-QoL were those who had had facial acne for more than five years.[37] The correlations of Acne-QoL-Br domain scores between themselves and with total Acne-QoL-Br score reinforce the questionnaire unity and keep its multidimensional characteristic as a HRQoL tool. The association of role-social and self-perception domains with total score confirmed the observation of a common phenomenon among subjects with facial acne, which is their great concern for their self-image and appearance. By expressing greater concern for self-image than for work, family or school environment relationships, subjects ratify the intuitive reasoning that facial acne creates a negative impact and that they feel embarrassed in their routine activities.[5,10] We observed that the aspects addressed in the self-perception domain caused negative impact on those related to public appearance, getting known, and living with other people, which are inferences drawn in the rolesocial domain.[35] This corroborates the positive correlation between the two domains, indicating that they should have contributed significantly for instrument construction, and validates the hypothesis that they yielded the expected measures. The use of a combination of generic and specific instruments is recommended to reiterate and/or complement the level of compromise in several dimensions. Due to the absence of specific questionnaires about acne validated in Brazilian-Portuguese, the version of a generic questionnaire (the Brazilian-Portuguese version of the SF-36) was used to verify Acne-QoL-Br validity. SF-36 measurement properties were evaluated by different acne studies and different populations as described by Both et al, reiterating its sensibility to identify quality of life compromise.[38] As facial acne lesions are apparent, a certain degree of social discomfort may be embedded in this context. This supports the hypothesis that, even in subjects with mild acne, the disease may undermine their self-confidence, limit their public appearances, and impair their family and work relationships.[8] The correlation between all Acne-QoL-Br domains and the SF-36 role-social domain, along with the correlations of Acne-QoL-Br self-perception and social domains with SF-36 mental health, corroborate the findings described by a case-control survey.[15] A study comprising 111 subjects with facial acne showed that the most compromised SF-36 domains were role-social and mental health, while the role-emotional domain presented some alteration when the patient was followed up during one year.[14] The mental health scores were worse than those recorded in diseases like asthma, epilepsy, diabetes, backache and arthritis.[14] A casecontrol study demonstrated that subjects with facial acne, according to the United Kingdom Sickness Impact Profile (UKSIP), felt a greater psychosocial impact than groups without acne on psychological, social functioning, and functional capacity domains.[35] The statement that acne subjects do not consider themselves sick was reaffirmed in this study by the absence of correlation between Acne-QoL-Br and general health, physical and bodily pain dimensions included in the SF-36. This demonstrates that general health status was preserved, as observed in other studies.[14,15] Unlikely, no correlations were perceived either between Acne-Qol-Br and SF-36 role-emotional domains and Acne-QoL-Br role-emotional and SF-36 mental health domains in this study. These findings corroborate the controversies about the association between psychological alterations and acne, which has been extensively discussed by several authors. However, the absence of relevant longitudinal studies establishing the causal relationship between these aspects has stirred up the controversy.[37] Although Aktan et al analysed 2,657 Turkish students, no difference between acne and control groups was found as far as traces of anxiety and depression were concerned.[32] It should be pointed out that authors chose the less sensitive scale, the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HAD), to assess mental health alterations among teenagers. This scale is rarely used for patients assisted at psychiatric clinics. In the 1990s, Gupta et al, by using the HAD, and Kellet et al, by using the Carroll Rating Scale for Depression (CRSD), observed that acne subjects had more serious symptoms of anxiety and depression than patients with alopecia areata, atopic dermatitis, psoriasis, and the normal population.[25,39] In the U.K., Smithard et al evaluated 317 adolescents with acne aged from 14 to 16 years, standardizing subjects' age and using a scale called Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SQD), which evaluates mental health. Results pointed out a prevalence of alterations twice more substantial in the emotional subscale for acne subjects.[9] According to the complex and multidimensional concept of quality of life, an improvement in psychosocial well-being should be considered a parameter as fundamental as absence of disease.[40,41,42] This study proposes that the general physician or specialist should try to identify which quality of life dimensions are compromised in facial acne subjects. Traces of minor mental disorders may also be perceived, thus facilitating the understanding of how acne affects mental health. The evaluation of quality of life may be based on the use of just one question or objective and of standardized questionnaires. These may sort out patients either as time passes by or by taking into consideration whether they have other diseases. It is also possible to predict patient outcomes and evaluate treatment efficacy.[43] HRQoL scales stem from the necessity to turn "subjective perception into an objective measurement", motivated by the discrepancy between specialist evaluation and patient perception of disease severity.[44,45] However, it is important to mention that by using these instruments one may not generalize the quality of life perception based only on scores. As some studies highlight, if a compromise in role-social is detected by just one instrument, this information may not necessarily reflect an objective opinion about subject's level of quality of life.[28,43,45] Acne patients should receive effective and early treatment as improvement in quality of life after therapy occurs relevantly and substantially, as demonstrated by various studies using specific instruments.[17,37,46,47,48] Disease-specific instruments for dermatosis acquire a special meaning because they report in a peculiar way the main perspective related to the harm inflicted on quality of life, including psychosocial and functional dimensions. Nevertheless, it is important to highlight that even certain generic instruments, such as SF-36, are able to detect alterations in quality of life among patients with facial acne.[35,49] The physician's decision concerning therapeutic intervention must be based on clinical parameters, such as acne severity and extension, and may not be invalidated by the use of quality of life indicators per se. It is of key importance to consider subject's perception concerning facial acne and the changes in wellbeing as complementary criteria. The lack of correlation between facial acne severity and Acne-QoL-Br scores observed in this study suggests that patients' perception of their disease may be considered in acne evaluation and treatment. The limitations of this study are: passive search for subjects with facial acne and lack of analysis of other measurement properties such as responsiveness and degree of questionnaire interpretation.

CONCLUSION

In summary, this study was able to establish that Acne-QoL-Br is a reliable and valid outcome measure available and applicable in the Brazilian context and a useful instrument to assess HRQoL in subjects with facial acne. These aspects include Brazil in the scenario of studies of HRQoL related to acne. It is important that more reports using that questionnaire, as well as clinical trials, should be carried out in order to consolidate Acne-QoL-Br validity and to evaluate its responsiveness and treatment outcomes in patients with facial acne.
  42 in total

1.  The quality of life in acne: a comparison with general medical conditions using generic questionnaires.

Authors:  E Mallon; J N Newton; A Klassen; S L Stewart-Brown; T J Ryan; A Y Finlay
Journal:  Br J Dermatol       Date:  1999-04       Impact factor: 9.302

2.  Body dysmorphic disorder in patients with acne.

Authors:  Ozcan Uzun; Cengiz Başoğlu; Ahmet Akar; Adnan Cansever; Aytekin Ozşahin; Mesut Cetin; Servet Ebrinç
Journal:  Compr Psychiatry       Date:  2003 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 3.735

3.  "Quality of life": a brand new concept for research and practice in psychiatry.

Authors:  Marcelo T Berlim; Marcelo P A Fleck
Journal:  Braz J Psychiatry       Date:  2004-01-15       Impact factor: 2.697

4.  Responsiveness of the Acne-Specific Quality of Life Questionnaire (Acne-QoL) to treatment for acne vulgaris in placebo-controlled clinical trials.

Authors:  S E Fehnel; L D McLeod; J Brandman; D I Arbit; C J McLaughlin-Miley; J H Coombs; A R Martin; C J Girman
Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  2002-12       Impact factor: 4.147

5.  [Descriptive epidemiological study of acne on scholar pupils in France during autumn 1996].

Authors:  F Daniel; B Dreno; F Poli; N Auffret; C Beylot; I Bodokh; M Chivot; P Humbert; J Meynadier; P Clerson; R Humbert; J P Berrou; R Dropsy
Journal:  Ann Dermatol Venereol       Date:  2000-03       Impact factor: 0.777

6.  Acne prevalence, knowledge about acne and psychological morbidity in mid-adolescence: a community-based study.

Authors:  A Smithard; C Glazebrook; H C Williams
Journal:  Br J Dermatol       Date:  2001-08       Impact factor: 9.302

7.  Disease-specific quality of life is associated with anxiety and depression in patients with acne.

Authors:  K Yazici; K Baz; A E Yazici; A Köktürk; S Tot; D Demirseren; V Buturak
Journal:  J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol       Date:  2004-07       Impact factor: 6.166

8.  Dermatology in-patient management greatly improves life quality.

Authors:  H A Kurwa; A Y Finlay
Journal:  Br J Dermatol       Date:  1995-10       Impact factor: 9.302

9.  [Acne in women: clinical patterns in different age-groups].

Authors:  Juliano Vilaverde Schmitt; Paula Yoshiko Masuda; Hélio Amante Miot
Journal:  An Bras Dermatol       Date:  2009 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 1.896

10.  Divergence of demographic factors associated with clinical severity compared with quality of life impact in acne.

Authors:  Jerry K L Tan; Yudi Li; Karen Fung; Aditya K Gupta; D Richard Thomas; Sheetal Sapra; Charles Lynde; Yves Poulin; Wayne Gulliver; Rolf J Sebaldt
Journal:  J Cutan Med Surg       Date:  2008 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 2.092

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  10 in total

1.  Translation, cross-cultural adaptation and validation of the vitiligo-specific health-related quality of life instrument (VitiQoL) into Brazilian Portuguese.

Authors:  Juliana Catucci Boza; Roopal V Kundu; Amanda Fabbrin; Roberta Horn; Natalia Giongo; Tania Ferreira Cestari
Journal:  An Bras Dermatol       Date:  2015-06-01       Impact factor: 1.896

2.  Field work I: selecting the instrument for data collection.

Authors:  Joao Luiz Bastos; Rodrigo Pereira Duquia; David Alejandro González-Chica; Jeovany Martínez Mesa; Renan Rangel Bonamigo
Journal:  An Bras Dermatol       Date:  2014 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 1.896

Review 3.  Adult-onset acne: prevalence, impact, and management challenges.

Authors:  Marco A Rocha; Ediléia Bagatin
Journal:  Clin Cosmet Investig Dermatol       Date:  2018-02-01

Review 4.  Adult female acne: a guide to clinical practice.

Authors:  Maria Cecilia Rivitti Machado; Edileia Bagatin; Thais Helena Proença de Freitas; Maria Cecília Rivitti-Machado; Beatriz Medeiros Ribeiro; Samanta Nunes; Marco Alexandre Dias da Rocha
Journal:  An Bras Dermatol       Date:  2019 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 1.896

5.  Assessment of the quality of life of Egyptian and Tunisian autoimmune bullous diseases' patients using an Arabic version of the autoimmune bullous disease quality of life and the treatment of autoimmune bullous disease quality of life questionnaires.

Authors:  Marwah Adly Saleh; Ines Zaraa; Nejib Doss; Noha Adly Saleh; Dedee F Murrell
Journal:  An Bras Dermatol       Date:  2019-10-17       Impact factor: 1.896

6.  Quality of life in Montenegrin pupils with acne.

Authors:  Milena Ražnatović Đurović; Milica Đurović; Janko Janković; Slavenka Janković
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-04-15       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Relationship between acne vulgaris and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms in a clinical sample of women.

Authors:  Ayhan Bilgic; Özlem Bilgic; Rukiye Sivri Çolak; Hilmi Cevdet Altınyazar
Journal:  An Bras Dermatol       Date:  2016-04       Impact factor: 1.896

8.  Translation, cultural adaptation and validation for Brazilian Portuguese of the Cardiff Acne Disability Index instrument.

Authors:  Luciana Rosa Grando; Roberta Horn; Vivian Trein Cunha; Tania Ferreira Cestari
Journal:  An Bras Dermatol       Date:  2016-04       Impact factor: 1.896

9.  Quality of life, self-esteem and psychosocial factors in adolescents with acne vulgaris.

Authors:  Gustavo Nunes Vilar; Laís Araújo dos Santos; Jader Freire Sobral Filho
Journal:  An Bras Dermatol       Date:  2015 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 1.896

10.  The effect on acne quality of life of topical azelaic acid 15% gel versus a combined oral contraceptive in adult female acne: A randomized trial.

Authors:  Marco Rocha; Adriana Sanudo; Edileia Bagatin
Journal:  Dermatoendocrinol       Date:  2017-10-13
  10 in total

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