| Literature DB >> 28920448 |
Kirstie L Haywood1,2, Tom S Mars2,3, Rachel Potter2,3, Shilpa Patel2,3, Manjit Matharu2,4, Martin Underwood2,3.
Abstract
Aims To critically appraise, compare and synthesise the quality and acceptability of multi-item patient reported outcome measures for adults with chronic or episodic headache. Methods Systematic literature searches of major databases (1980-2016) to identify published evidence of PROM measurement and practical properties. Data on study quality (COSMIN), measurement and practical properties per measure were extracted and assessed against accepted standards to inform an evidence synthesis. Results From 10,903 reviewed abstracts, 103 articles were assessed in full; 46 provided evidence for 23 PROMs: Eleven specific to the health-related impact of migraine (n = 5) or headache (n = 6); six assessed migraine-specific treatment response/satisfaction; six were generic measures. Evidence for measurement validity and score interpretation was strongest for two measures of impact, Migraine-Specific Quality of Life Questionnaire (MSQ v2.1) and Headache Impact Test 6-item (HIT-6), and one of treatment response, the Patient Perception of Migraine Questionnaire (PPMQ-R). Evidence of reliability was limited, but acceptable for the HIT-6. Responsiveness was rarely evaluated. Evidence for the remaining measures was limited. Patient involvement was limited and poorly reported. Conclusion While evidence is limited, three measures have acceptable evidence of reliability and validity: HIT-6, MSQ v2.1 and PPMQ-R. Only the HIT-6 has acceptable evidence supporting its completion by all "headache" populations.Entities:
Keywords: Headache; patient-reported outcome; reliability; systematic review; validity
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28920448 PMCID: PMC6024352 DOI: 10.1177/0333102417731348
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cephalalgia ISSN: 0333-1024 Impact factor: 6.292
Figure 1.Review of measures used with people with headache – PRISMA flow diagram for article selection (search conducted 1980 to December 2016).
Data synthesis, levels of evidence and overall quality of reviewed PROMs in the headache population (n = 23)[a]. Note: CHESS PROMs Review – edited 27/07/17.
| Reliability | Validity | Construct validity | Responsiveness |
| ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PROMb/study | Number of evaluations | Internal consistency | Temporal stability | Measurement error | Content validity | Structural validity | Hypothesis testing | Known groups | Responsiveness | Interpretation |
| Condition-specific ( | ||||||||||
| Migraine impact (5/17) | ||||||||||
| FAIM ( | 1 | + Moderate | ? Limited | + Moderate | + Moderate | |||||
| HANA ( | 1 | + Unknown | + Unknown | ? Unknown | ? Unknown | ? Unknown | ? Unknown | ES only | ||
| MIDAS ( | 13 | + Unknown | + Unknown | + Moderate | + Moderate | |||||
| MSQ v2.1 ( | 11 | + Strong | ± Conflicting | + Limited | + Strong | + Moderate | + Moderate | + Limited | ||
| MSQoL ( | 3 | + Limited | + Strong | + Moderate | ? Unknown | ? Unknown | ? Unknown | |||
| Headache-impact (6/11) | ||||||||||
| EUROLIGHT ( | 1 | ? Unknown | ? Unknown | ? Limited | ? Unknown | ? Unknown | ||||
| HADLI ( | 1 | + Limited | ? Unknown | + Limited | ||||||
| HDQ ( | 1 | + Limited | ? Unknown | + Limited | ||||||
| HIT ( | 3 | + Moderate | + Limited | + Moderate | + Moderate | + Moderate | ||||
| HIT-6 ( | 13 | + Strong | + Moderate | + Limited | + Moderate | + Strong | + Strong | + Limited | ||
| SF-36 ‘Headache’ Modification ( | 1 | ? Unknown | ? Unknown | |||||||
| Response to migraine-specific treatment (6/17) | ||||||||||
| CORS ( | 1 | + Limited | + Moderate | + Limited | ? Limited | + Limited | ||||
| M-ACT ( | 2 | + Moderate | ? Unknown | ? Unknown | ||||||
| M-TAQ ( | 1 | + Limited | + Limited | + Limited | ||||||
| M-TOQ ( | 1 | + Limited | + Limited | + Limited | + Limited | + Limited | ||||
| MTSM ( | 2 | + Limited | + Moderate | + Limited | + Moderate | + Moderate | ||||
| PPMQ-R ( | 2 | + Strong | + Limited | + Strong | + Strong | + Strong | + Strong | + Limited | ||
| Generic measures ( | ||||||||||
| Profile measures (3/6) | ||||||||||
| SF-36 ( | 5 | + Moderate | ||||||||
| SF-12 ( | 1 | + Limited | ||||||||
| SF-8 ( | 4 | + Moderate | + Moderate | |||||||
| Utility measures (3/6) | ||||||||||
| EuroQoL EQ-5D-3L ( | 3 | + Limited | + Limited | |||||||
| HUI-3 ( | 1 | ? Unknown | ||||||||
| QWB/QWB-SA ( | 1 | ± Conflicting | ? Unknown | |||||||
Data synthesis: The data were qualitatively synthesised to determine the overall quality of measurement properties and acceptability of each reviewed PROM. The synthesis took the following factors into account: a) methodological quality of the reviewed studies (COSMIN scores); b) the number of studies reporting evidence of measurement properties per PROM; c) the results for each measurement property for each PROM; and d) the consistency of results between reviewed studies.
The data synthesis score has two elements (19,27): First, the overall quality of a measurement property was reported as: adequate (+), not adequate (−), conflicting (±), or unclear/indeterminate (?) (see Table 1 for detail). Second, levels of evidence for the overall quality of each measurement property were further defined to indicate ‘strong’ – consistent findings in multiple studies of good methodological quality OR in one study of excellent quality; ‘moderate’ – consistent findings in multiple studies of fair methodological quality OR in one study of good methodological quality; ‘limited’ – one study of fair methodological quality; ‘conflicting’ – conflicting findings; or ‘unknown’ evidence – only studies of poor methodological quality. Where the data entry box is left blank, this signifies no available evidence.