| Literature DB >> 25897216 |
Mario Cazzola1, Nicola Alexander Hanania2, William MacNee3, Katja Rüdell4, Claire Hackford4, Nihad Tamimi4.
Abstract
Patient-reported outcome (PRO) measures that quantify disease impact have become important measures of outcome in COPD research and treatment. The objective of this literature review was to comprehensively evaluate psychometric properties of available PRO instruments and the ability of each of them to characterize pharmaceutical treatment effects from published clinical trial evidence. Identified in this study were several PRO measures, both those that have been used extensively in COPD clinical trials (St George's Respiratory Questionnaire and Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire) and new instruments whose full value is still to be determined. This suggests a great need for more information about the patient experience of treatment benefit, but this also may pose challenges to researchers, clinicians, and other important stakeholders (eg, regulatory agencies, pharmaceutical companies) who develop new treatment entities and payers (including but not limited to health technology assessment agencies such as the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence and the Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health). The purpose of this review is to enable researchers and clinicians to gain a broad overview of PRO measures in COPD by summarizing the value and purpose of these measures and by providing sufficient detail for interested audiences to determine which instrument may be the most suitable for evaluating a particular research purpose.Entities:
Keywords: COPD; health related quality of life; patient reported outcome; psychometric properties; quality of life
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25897216 PMCID: PMC4396518 DOI: 10.2147/COPD.S77368
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis ISSN: 1176-9106
Overview of patient-reported outcome measures in COPD
| PRO | Developers | Purpose of tool | Domains | Number of items | Recall period | Mode of administration | Response scale | Scoring | MCID |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) | Jones et al | To assess health impairment in chronic airflow limitation | Symptoms; activity; impacts on daily life | 50 | Last 4 weeks | Self-administered | 3–5 point Likert scales Yes/no | Total subscale scores calculated from the summed weights for questions 1–8 in symptoms; 11–15 in activity; and 9–10, 12–14 and 16–27 in impact. Total score sums all positive responses and expresses these as a percentage of the total weight of the questionnaire. | Improvement of 4 points on the separate domains and the total score is most commonly used, although changes of 2 to 8 are also sometimes considered. |
| St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire for COPD (SGRQ-C) | Meguro et al | To assess COPD in a way that allows scores to be directly compared to the SGRQ but with the weakest items removed | Symptoms; activity; impacts on daily life | 40 | No standard recall | Self-administered | 3–5-point Likert scales Yes/no | Specific scoring algorithm was developed to make sure that the revised scoring is equivalent to the original scale. | Improvement of 4 points on the separate domains and the total score is most commonly used, although changes of 2 to 8 are also sometimes considered. |
| Chronic Respiratory Disease Questionnaire (CRQ) | Guyatt et al | To measure health-related quality of life in patients with chronic respiratory disease | Mastery; fatigue; emotional function; dyspnea | 20 | Last 2 weeks | Self-administered | 7-point Likert scale Yes/no | Total score and subscores can be calculated; higher scores indicate better health-related quality of life. A score of 1–7 can be calculated, or a score of 20–140. | 0.5 on 7-point scale, 10 on the scale of 140 |
| Short Form Chronic Respiratory Disease Questionnaire (SF-CRQ) | Tsai et al | To measure health-related quality of life in patients with chronic respiratory disease | Mastery; fatigue; emotional function; dyspnea | 8 | mstandard recall period | Self-administered | 7-point Likert scale | Total score and subscores can be calculated; higher scores indicate better health-related quality of life. | 0.5 on 7-point scale |
| Clinical COPD Questionnaire (CCQ) | van der Molen et al | To assess health status in a primary setting | Symptoms; functional state; mental state | 10 | Last 7 days Last 24 hours | Self-administered | 7-point Likert scale | The final score is the mean of all ten items, and domain-specific scores can be calculated separately if required. | 0.4 |
| COPD Assessment Test (CAT) | Jones et al | To quantify the symptom burden of COPD in a short, simple measure | Energy; sleep; confidence; activities; breathlessness; chest tightness; phlegm; cough | 8 | Not specified | Self-administered; pen and paper | 6-point numeric rating scale | There is a total score of 40; scores of 0–10, 11–20, 21–30, and 31–40 represent mild, moderate, severe, or very severe clinical impact, respectively. | Estimated at 1–3 points, but unclear. |
| Exacerbations of Chronic Pulmonary Disease Tool (EXACT-PRO) | Leidy et al | To evaluate the frequency, severity, and duration of acute exacerbations of COPD and chronic bronchitis | Breathlessness; cough and sputum; chest symptoms | 14 | Today | Self-administered Electronic | m6-point Likert scales | Items are scored according to the 5-6 point scales and summed to find a total score; the total score then is converted to a 0–100 scale, with higher scores indicating more severe health state or exacerbation. | Yet to be established. |
| Exacerbations of Chronic Pulmonary Disease Respiratory Symptoms (E-RS) | Leidy et al | To assess the effect of treatment on the severity of respiratory symptoms of COPD | Breathlessness; cough and sputum; chest symptoms | 11 | Today | Self-administered Electronic | 5- and 6-point Likert scales | Total score ranges from 0–40, with score ranges of 0–17 for breathlessness, 0–12 for chest symptoms, and 0–11 for cough and sputum. | 3-point change in E-RS total score. |
| The Breathlessness Cough and Sputum Scale (BCSS) | Leidy et al | To track the severity of respiratory symptoms and evaluate the efficacy of treatment in clinical trials of patients with COPD | Breathlessness; cough; sputum | 3 | Daily diary | Self-administered | 5-point Likert scale | A daily total is expressed as the sum of three item scores, with a range of 0–12 for which a higher score indicates a more severe manifestation of symptoms. | A mean ΔBCSS total score >1.0 represents substantial symptomatic improvement; changes of approximately 0.6 can be interpreted as moderate, and changes of 0.3 can be considered small. |
| Baseline and Transition Dyspnea Indexes (BDI-TDI) | Mahler et al | To provide a multidimensional measurement of dyspnea based on activities of daily living insymptomatic individuals | BDI: functional impairment; magnitude of task; magnitude of effort TDI: functional impairment; magnitude of task; magnitude of effort | BDI: 3 TDI: 3 | Last 2 weeks | Self-administered Physician-administered Electronic version (self-administered) | Grades are based on patient responses | Score range in BDI is 0–12, score range in TDI is -9 to 9. | 1 unit change in TDI. |
| Medical Research Council (MRC) Dyspnea Scale | Medical Research Council | To categorize disability in COPD | Not applicable; unidimensional | 1 | Not specified | Originally physician administered Self-administered; pen and paper | 5-point numeric rating scale | Patients are classified into one of the 5 MRC grades on the basis of their perceived level of disability. | Yet to be established. |
| Modified Medical Research Council (m-MRC) Dyspnea Scale | Aaron et al | To categorize disability in COPD | Not applicable; unidimensional | 1 | Not specified | Self-administered; pen and paper | 5-point numeric rating scale | Patients are classified into one of the 5 MRC grades on the basis of their perceived level of disability. | Changes in the CRQ dyspnea score and TDI correlated with each other ( |
| McGill COPD Quality of Life Questionnaire | Pakhale et al | To combine generic health status with disease-specific modules for COPD health status | Physical function; feelings; and symptoms | 29 | Last 4 weeks | Self-administered pen and paper | 5-point numeric rating scale | Feelings, physical function, and three separate subscale symptoms. | Yet to be established. |
| The Visual Simplified Respiratory Questionnaire (VSRQ) | Perez et al | To evaluate quality of life in COPD patients | Dyspnea; anxiety; depressed mood; sleep; energy; daily activities; social activities; sexual life | 8 | Physician administered | Unidimensional scale | Good level of consistency between the concepts measured by VSRQ and those by SGRQ, but no redundancy (correlations of −0.70 between VSRQ global score and SGRQ total score). The VSRQ global score was found to be more strongly correlated with the SGRQ activities and impacts subscores than with the symptoms subscore. | 3.4 | |
| Dyspnea-12 | Yorke et al | To measure the current level of a patient’s breathlessness severity | Not applicable; unidimensional | 12 | These days | Self-administered pen and paper | 4-point numeric rating scale | A total score is calculated from 12 items (although 3 items may be missing) and then a weighted scoring is applied. | Yet to be established. |
| Dyspnea Management Questionnaire Computer Adaptive Test (DMQ-CAT) | Norweg et al | To compare dyspnea scores obtained before and after treatment of individual patients and of groups of patients | Dyspnea intensity; dyspnea-related anxiety; activity avoidance; activity self-efficacy | 71 | Last 2 weeks | Self-administered | Variable (1–6-point scale with separate category for not relevant) | Uses CAT so that only the most informative items are used. | Using CAT simulation analyses, the DMQ-CAT showed higher measurement accuracy compared to the total item pool ( |
| Shortness of Breath with Daily Activities Questionnaire (SOBDA) | Wilcox et al | To measure dyspnea during daily activities | Not applicable; unidimensional | 13 | Daily | Self-administered electronic diary | Slightly, moderately, severely, and so severe that I could not do the Activity | Weekly mean score ranging from 1–4, with higher scores indicating more severe breathlessness. | Yet to be established |
| Global Chest Symptoms Questionnaire (GCSQ) Capacity of Daily Living during the Morning questionnaire (CDLM) | Partridge et al | To assess the burden and extent of morning symptoms and the ability of patients to perform morning activities | The patient’s ability to carry out morning activities; shortness of breath; chest tightness | GCSQ –2 CDLM –6 | Daily | Self-administered | 5-point numeric rating scale | A total score can be calculated as an average of the questions on each questionnaire. | Estimated to be 0.20 for CDLM and 0.15 for GCSQ |
| Living with COPD (LCOPD) | McKenna et al | To assess the overall impact of COPD from a patient’s perspective | Not applicable unidimensional | 22 | Not mentioned | Self-administered | True/not true | A total score can be calculated. | Yet to be established |
Abbreviations: MCID, minimal clinically important difference; PRO, patient-reported outcome; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second.
Psychometric properties of patient reported outcomes in COPD
| PRO instrument | Reliability | Validity |
|---|---|---|
| St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) | Acceptable internal consistency reliability; Cronbach’s alpha >0.7 test–retest reliability: ICC =0.8–0.9 | Convergent validity |
| St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire for COPD (SGRQ-C) | Excellent internal consistency reliability; ICC =0.96–0.99 | Correlations with other measures of disease were very similar to those obtained with the SGRQ. |
| Chronic Respiratory Disease Questionnaire (CRQ) | Good internal consistency reliability; Cronbach’s alpha =0.80 test–retest reliability: ICC =0.83–0.95 (short-term) and ICC =0.83–0.90 (long-term) | Convergent validity |
| Short Form-Chronic Respiratory Disease Questionnaire (SF-CRQ) | Good internal consistency reliability; Cronbach’s alpha =0.82 | Significant convergent validity with dimension-specific instruments, such as the SAS and VAS for dyspnea |
| Clinical COPD Questionnaire (CCQ) | Excellent internal consistency reliability; Cronbach’s alpha =0.91 test–retest reliability: ICC =0.94 | Discriminant validity |
| Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) Assessment Test (CAT) | Good internal consistency; Cronbach’s alpha =0.88 test–retest reliability: ICC =0.8 | Correlates well with the SGRQ (across seven European countries |
| Exacerbations of Chronic Pulmonary Disease Tool (EXACT-PRO) | Excellent internal consistency reliability; Pearson separation index =0.92 test–retest reliability: ICC =0.77 | EXACT scores correlated with SGRQ-C ( |
| The Breathlessness Cough and Sputum Scale (BCSS) | Acceptable internal consistency reliability; Cronbach’s alpha =0.70 daily, 0.95–0.99 over time test–retest reliability: ICC =0.77–0.788 | Correlations with pulmonary function (FEV %predicted) were −0.01 1 (ns) to −0.36 ( |
| Baseline and Transition Dyspnea Indexes (BDI-TDI) | Good internal consistency reliability; Cronbach’s alpha =0.80 test–retest reliability: ICC =0.76 | Baseline focal score had the highest correlation ( |
| Medical Research Council (MRC) Dyspnea Scale | Significant association between MRC grade and shuttle distance, SGRQ and CRQ scores, mood state and EADL. FEV1 was not associated with MRC grade. | |
| McGill COPD Quality of Life Questionnaire | Internal consistency reliability; Cronbach’s alpha =0.68–0.82 test–retest reliability: ICC =0.74–0.96 for the subscales and 0.95 for the total score | Convergent validity (correlation with the SGRQ was moderately high, |
| The Visual Simplified Respiratory Questionnaire (VSRQ) | Good internal consistency reliability; Cronbach’s alpha =0.84 test–retest reliability: ICC =0.77 | Good concurrent validity with SGRQ (Spearman’s coefficient =−0.70) |
| Exacerbations of COPD Respiratory Symptoms (E-RS) | Good internal consistency reliability: Cronbach’s alpha =0.88 test–retest reliability: ICC =0.90 | Total scores correlated significantly |
| Dyspnea-12 | Good internal consistency reliability; Cronbach’s alpha =0.93 test–retest reliability: ICC =0.94 | Its scores were significantly associated with MRC grade ( |
| Dyspnea Management Questionnaire Computer Adaptive Test (DMQ-CAT) | Good internal consistency reliability; Cronbach’s alpha =0.92–0.98 test–retest reliability: ICC =0.58–0.82 | Good to high concurrent validity with comparative questionnaires (UCSD, SOBQ, CRQ, CSES, and HADS) ( |
| Shortness of Breath with Daily Activities Questionnaire (SOBDA) | Good internal consistency reliability; Cronbach’s alpha =0.87 test–retest reliability: ICC =0.91 | Convergent validity was demonstrated by moderatef correlation with CRQ-SAS (0.60) and SGRQ-C (0.61) |
| Global Chest Symptoms Questionnaire (GCSQ) | Good to high reliability: Cronbach’s alpha =0.75–0.93 | Validity was found to be significant |
| Capacity of Daily Living during the Morning Questionnaire (CDLM) | ||
| Living with COPD (LCOPD) | Good and high reliability; Cronbach’s alpha =0.92 test–retest reliability was also 0.83 | Convergent validity was demonstrated by moderate correlations with SGRQ (Symptoms) 0.66; SGRQ (Activity) 0.79; and SGRQ (Impact) 0.85 |
Notes:
Characterization of Cronbach’s alpha: α≥0.9= excellent; 0.9>α≥0.8= good; 0.8>α≥ 0.7= acceptable; 0.7>α≥0.6= questionable; 0.6>α≥0.5= poor; 0.5>α= unacceptable.
Characterization of Pearson correlation r: 0.9–1= very high, 0.7–0.9= high, 0.5–0.7= moderate, 0.3–0.5= low, and 0–0.3= little or no correlation.
Spearman-rank correlation used to assess discriminant, convergent, and divergent validity.
Abbreviations: BPQ, Breathing Problems Questionnaire; CCQ, Clinical COPD Questionnaire; CI, confidence interval; CRQ, Chronic Respiratory Disease Questionnaire; CSES, COPD self-efficacy scale; EADL, Nottingham Extended Activity of Daily Living Questionnaire; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second; HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Score; ICC, intraclass coefficient correlation; MWD, minute walking distance; ns, not significant; PRO, patient-reported outcome; SAS, Symptom and Activity Scale; VAS, visual analog scale; UCSD SOBQ, University of California, San Diego Shortness of Breath Questionnaire.