Literature DB >> 25055358

Cross-cultural adaptation to Portuguese of tools for assessing the nutritional status of patients on dialysis.

Renata Lemos Fetter1, Fernanda Guedes Bigogno1, Fernanda Galvão Pasculli de Oliveira1, Carla Maria Avesani1.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The 7 point subjective global assessment (7p-SGA) and the malnutrition inflammation score (MIS) are tools commonly applied for the assessment of nutritional status in dialyzed patients. Both were developed in English and require translation to Portuguese to be applied in Brazil. The cross-cultural equivalence process ensures semantic and measurement equivalence of a translated tool.
OBJECTIVE: To perform the cross-cultural adaptation to Portuguese of the 7p-SGA and MIS.
METHODS: Semantic equivalence was performed by the back-translation method and by assessing the degree of similarity between the original instrument and that back-translated from Portuguese to English (Back-translation). The assessment of the equivalence measurement was made by evaluating the intern reliability (Cronbach's α) and interobserver reliability (two observers). One-hundred and one elderly patients on hemodialysis (HD) were included.
RESULTS: Both instruments showed a high degree of semantic similarity with results close to the maximum value (7p-SGA 96.8 ± 7.8 and MIS 99.6 ± 1.4). The intern consistency showed a Cronbach's α value for 7p-SGA of 0.72 and of 0.53 for MIS. The interobserver reproducibility of 7p-SGA was moderate (intraclass coefficient [ICC] = 0.74 [95% CI: 0.58; 0.84]), while for MIS was strong (ICC = 0.88 [95% CI: 0.81; 0.93]).
CONCLUSION: The 7p-SGA and MIS translated into Portuguese can be applied for assessing the nutritional status of elderly patients on HD. Studies testing the applicability of these instruments in adult patients on HD and in peritoneal dialysis should yet be performed.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25055358     DOI: 10.5935/0101-2800.20140028

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Bras Nefrol        ISSN: 0101-2800


  1 in total

1.  Design and methodology of the Aging Nephropathy Study (AGNES): a prospective cohort study of elderly patients with chronic kidney disease.

Authors:  Venceslau A Coelho; Giovani Gn Santos; Carla M Avesani; Cicero Italo L Bezerra; Luana Cristina A Silva; Julia C Lauar; Bengt Lindholm; Peter Stenvinkel; Wilson Jacob-Filho; Irene L Noronha; Roberto Zatz; Rosa M A Moysés; Rosilene M Elias
Journal:  BMC Nephrol       Date:  2020-11-07       Impact factor: 2.388

  1 in total

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