| Literature DB >> 27267885 |
Daniel R Reissmann1,2, Mike T John3, Leah Feuerstahler4, Kazuyoshi Baba5, Gyula Szabó6, Asja Čelebić7, Niels Waller4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Prospective assessments of oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) changes are prone to response shift effects when patients reconceptualize, reprioritize, or recalibrate the perceived meanings of OHRQoL test items. If this occurs, OHRQoL measurements are not "invariant" and may reflect changes in problem profiles or perceptions of OHRQoL test items. This suggests that response shift effects must be measured and controlled to achieve valid prospective OHRQoL measurement. The aim of this study was to quantify response shift effects of Oral Health Impact Profile (OHIP) scores in prospective studies of prosthodontic patients.Entities:
Keywords: Longitudinal assessment; Measurement invariance; OHIP; OHRQoL; Prospective studies; Response shift
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27267885 PMCID: PMC4897855 DOI: 10.1186/s12955-016-0492-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
Fig. 1One-factor model for OHRQoL assessed with 14-item OHIP at two occasions; Note: rectangles represent items (i.e., measured or observed variables [OHIP2 – OHIP48]), ovals reflect latent common factors [OHRQoL1 and OHRQoL2], triangles indicate intercepts [τ2 − τ48 and τ´ 2 − τ´ 48], unidirectional arrows illustrate directional links (i.e., values of regression parameters for factor loadings [λ2 − λ48 and λ´ 2 − λ´ 48] and intercepts), and bidirectional arrows illustrate common factor variances [Φ 1,1 and Φ 2,2] and between-occasion factor covariance [Φ 1,2] as well as item residual variances [ Ω 2_1,1 − Ω 48_1,1 and Ω 2_2,2 − Ω 48_2,2] and covariances [Ω 2_1,2 − Ω 48_1,2]. For clarity, notation is slightly different than that used in the text
Demographic characteristics and OHRQoL change from Time 1 (baseline) to Time 2 (follow-up) of study participants
| N | Age [yrs] | Female | OHIP-14 sum score | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Time 1 | Time 2 | |||||
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| All | 554 | 55.3 (15.3) | 286 (51.6) | 10.5 (9.9) | 7.2 (8.0) | < .001 |
| Included samples | ||||||
| Hungary [ | 62 | 54.9 (14.6) | 37 (59.7) | 13.2 (10.7) | 6.8 (10.9) | < .001 |
| Germany [ | 208 | 55.7 (15.8) | 98 (47.1) | 8.0 (7.3) | 7.0 (6.8) | .005 |
| Germany [ | 101 | 55.9 (14.6) | 56 (55.4) | 11.2 (10.6) | 5.7 (8.4) | < .001 |
| Germany [ | 123 | 54.6 (15.8) | 61 (49.6) | 8.0 (8.8) | 6.6 (7.7) | .009 |
| Japan [ | 30 | 60.8 (14.4) | 23 (76.7) | 16.0 (10.3) | 10.8 (8.8) | < .001 |
| Croatia (not published yet) | 30 | 48.1 (12.7) | 11 (36.7) | 25.4 (8.1) | 12.6 (4.8) | < .001 |
*Paired t test
OHIP-14 item content and item means with standard deviations at Time 1 (baseline) and Time 2 (follow-up) based on ordinal 5-point response categories
| Item # | Item content | Item mean (SD) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Time 1 | Time 2 | ||
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| Item 2 | Trouble pronouncing words | 0.73 (1.07) | 0.55 (0.81) |
| Item 6 | Taste worse | 0.56 (0.89) | 0.45 (0.74) |
| Item 10 | Painful aching | 1.05 (1.07) | 0.82 (0.91) |
| Item 16 | Uncomfortable to eat | 1.19 (1.28) | 0.86 (1.01) |
| Item 20 | Self-conscious | 1.07 (1.33) | 0.57 (0.90) |
| Item 23 | Tense | 0.97 (1.12) | 0.61 (0.85) |
| Item 29 | Diet unsatisfactory | 0.68 (1.08) | 0.46 (0.78) |
| Item 32 | Interrupt meals | 0.71 (1.03) | 0.50 (0.82) |
| Item 35 | Difficult to relax | 0.81 (1.09) | 0.51 (0.80) |
| Item 38 | Been embarrassed | 0.84 (1.07) | 0.48 (0.76) |
| Item 42 | Irritable with others | 0.44 (0.75) | 0.34 (0.63) |
| Item 43 | Difficulty doing jobs | 0.43 (0.73) | 0.32 (0.63) |
| Item 47 | Life unsatisfying | 0.78 (0.99) | 0.48 (0.78) |
| Item 48 | Unable to function | 0.28 (0.62) | 0.23 (0.55) |
SEM Model fit summary
| Model | Specifications | Scaled | df | Scaled RMSEA | Scaled SRMR | Scaled CFI | Scaled TLI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # 1 | Γ1 ≠ Γ2, | 606 | 335 | .038 | .051 | .92 | .91 |
| # 2 | Γ1 = Γ2, | 816 | 375 | .046 | .078 | .87 | .87 |
| # 3 | Γ1 = Γ2, | 633 | 361 | .037 | .064 | .92 | .92 |
RMSEA - root mean square error of approximation; SRMR - standardized root mean square residual; CFI - comparative fit index; TLI - Tucker–Lewis index
Parameter estimates for final model (# 3) and effect sizes of observed changes based on ordinal 5-point response categories and of true changes when item means were modeled by specifying a vector of model intercepts in final CFA model
| Item # | Parameter estimatesa | Effect sizes | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Observed item changes | True item changes | |
| Item 2 | 1.000 | 0.762 | .155 | .701 | .365 | −.18 | −.24 |
| Item 6 | 0.731 | 0.594 | .217 | .565 | .403 | −.14 | −.22 |
| Item 10 | 0.872 | 1.042 | .172 | .816 | .618 | −.21 | −.19 |
| Item 16 | 1.439 | 1.202 | .085 | .731 | .438 | −.26 | −.28 |
| Item 20 | 1.394 | 0.993 | .072 | .903 | .257 | −.41 | −.28 |
| Item 23 | 1.236 | 0.942 | .023 | .570 | .295 | −.33 | −.27 |
| Item 29 | 1.188 | 0.719 | .119 | .550 | .206 | −.23 | −.31 |
| Item 32 | 1.047 | 0.735 | .048 | .579 | .358 | −.20 | −.24 |
| Item 35 | 1.010 | 0.784 | .168 | .736 | .351 | −.29 | −.25 |
| Item 38 | 1.219 | 0.811 | .005 | .484 | .160 | −.35 | −.30 |
| Item 42 | 0.752 | 0.480 | .088 | .308 | .233 | −.14 | −.26 |
| Item 43 | 0.787 | 0.471 | .058 | .265 | .227 | −.14 | −.26 |
| Item 47 | 1.064 | 0.760 | .140 | .490 | .287 | −.34 | −.29 |
| Item 48 | 0.600 | 0.332 | .092 | .222 | .203 | −.09 | −.25 |
| OHIP-14 sum score | Latent factor mean | ||||||
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| Observed change | True change | |
| .000 | −.246 | .229 | .441 | .284 | −.34 | −.37 | |
aSubscripts refer to Time 1 and Time 2, respectively
Γ: factor loadings; τ: item intercepts; Ω: across-occasion and occasion-specific residual variances; α: latent factor means; Φ: variances and covariances among the common latent factors
Note: For the factor loadings (Γ), standard errors were ≤ .095. For the intercepts (τ), standard errors were ≤ .049. For the residual covariances (diag(Ω12)), standard errors were ≤ .039. For the residual variances at Time 1 (diag(Ω11)), standard errors were ≤ .067; at time 2 (diag(Ω22)), standard errors were ≤ .054. The standard error of α 2 equals .029; the standard errors of Φ 12, Φ 11, and Φ 22 equal .033, .058, and .042, respectively