| Literature DB >> 29532245 |
Heleen C Melissant1,2, Koen I Neijenhuijs1,2, Femke Jansen2,3, Neil K Aaronson4, Mogens Groenvold5,6, Bernhard Holzner7, Caroline B Terwee8, Cornelia F van Uden-Kraan1,2, Pim Cuijpers1, Irma M Verdonck-de Leeuw9,10,11.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Body image is acknowledged as an important aspect of health-related quality of life in cancer patients. The Body Image Scale (BIS) is a patient-reported outcome measure (PROM) to evaluate body image in cancer patients. The aim of this study was to systematically review measurement properties of the BIS among cancer patients.Entities:
Keywords: Body Image Scale; Body image; Cancer; Measurement properties; PROM; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29532245 PMCID: PMC5919987 DOI: 10.1007/s00520-018-4145-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Support Care Cancer ISSN: 0941-4355 Impact factor: 3.603
Fig. 1.Flow diagram of the systematic search
Characteristics of included studies
| Reference | Main aim of study | Population | Sample size |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anagnostopoulos et al. [ | Examining reliability and validity of Body Image Scale in Greek | Breast cancer patients treated with mastectomy or breast-conserving surgery; Greece | 70 |
| Gómez-Campelo et al. [ | Validation of Body Image Scale in Spanish | Breast and gynecological cancer patients; Spain | 100 |
| Hopwood et al. [ | Development and validation of Body Image Scale in English | Breast cancer patients; UK | 682 |
| Karayurt et al. [ | Validation of Body Image Scale in Turkish | Ostomy patients; Turkey | 100 |
| Khang et al. [ | Validation of Body Image Scale in Korean | Breast cancer patients treated with mastectomy, breast-conserving surgery or oncoplastic surgery; South Korea | 155 |
| Moreira et al. [ | Validation of Body Image Scale in Portuguese | Postoperative breast cancer patients; Portugal | 173 |
| Rhondali et al. [ | To examine the construct of body image dissatisfaction and its measurement using a single question in patients with advanced cancer | Advanced cancer; USA | 81 |
| Van Verschuer et al. [ | Validation of Body Image Scale in Dutch | Breast cancer patients who have received breast conserving treatment or mastectomy; The Netherlands | 209 |
| Whistance et al. [ | Validation of Body Image Scale for colorectal patients undergoing surgery | Colorectal cancer patients undergoing surgery; UK | 82 |
Structural validity of the BIS
| Reference | Methodology | Results | Methodological quality | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anagnostopoulos et al. [ | EFAa, CFAb | Two factor solution: perceived attractiveness accounting for 52.7% of the variance, and body appearance satisfaction accounting for 8.4% of the variance. The two factors were positively intercorrelated ( | Fair | – |
| Gómez-Campelo et al. [ | EFA, CFA | One factor solution accounting for 81.03% of the variance with acceptable fit statistics. SRMR: 0.059. | Fair | + |
| Hopwood et al. [ | EFA | One factor solution in three analyses accounting for 50.1–57.6% of variance. Two-factor solution for mastectomy subgroup: appearance/attractiveness (26.9% of variance) and body satisfaction (18.8% of variance) but results were not reproducible. | Excellent | + |
| Karayurt et al. [ | EFA, CFA | One-factor solution, fit statistics were acceptable. SRMR: 0.05; CFI: 0.96. | Fair | + |
| Khang et al. [ | EFA | One-factor solution for global (66.6% of variance), BCS (59.9% of variance), and mastectomy (74.4% of variance) subgroups. Two-factor solution for oncoplastic subgroup (40.2 and 28.6% of variance). | Good | + |
| Moreira et al. [ | PCAc | One-factor solution with eigenvalue of 6.12, explaining 61.2% of variance. | Fair | + |
| Whistance et al. [ | Multi-trait item scaling | One-factor solution single items each correlated well with the overall ten-item BIS scale with the exception of item 10 ( | Poor | ? |
+ sufficient.? Indeterminate, − insufficient, NA not applicable, RMSEA root mean square error of approximation, SRMR standardized root-mean-square residual, CFI comparative fit index BCS breast-conserving surgery
aExploratory factor analysis
bConfirmatory Factor Analysis
cPrincipal Component Analysis
Internal consistency (Cronbach’s α) of the BIS
| Reference | (Sub)groups | Value ( | Methodological quality | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anagnostopoulos et al. [ | Satisfaction subscale (7 items) | 0.87 | Fair | + |
| Attractiveness subscale (3 items) | 0.92 | |||
| General body image concerns (5 items) | 0.81 | |||
| Gómez-Campelo et al. [ | Total sample | 0.97 | Fair | – |
| Breast cancer subgroup | 0.97 | |||
| Gynecological cancer subgroup | 0.97 | |||
| Hopwood et al. [ | Total sample | 0.93 | Excellent | + |
| BCS subgroup | 0.91 | |||
| Mastectomy subgroup | 0.91 | |||
| Remaining subgroupsa | 0.86 | |||
| Karayurt et al. [ | Total sample | 0.94 | Fair | + |
| Khang et al. [ | Total sample | 0.94 | Good | + |
| BCS subgroup | 0.92 | |||
| Mastectomy subgroup | 0.96 | |||
| Oncoplastic surgery subgroup | 0.92 | |||
| Moreira et al. [ | Total sample | 0.93 | Fair | + |
| BCS subgroup | 0.93 | |||
| Mastectomy subgroup | 0.92 | |||
| Rhondali et al. [ | Total sample | 0.88 | Fair | + |
| Van Verschuer et al. [ | Total sample (time 1) | 0.91 | Good | + |
| Total sample (time 2) | 0.92 | |||
| Whistance et al. [ | Total sample (9-item scale) | 0.90 | Good | + |
BCS breast-conserving surgery
aBreast cancer patients, advanced breast cancer patients, breast cancer patients with oncoplastic surgery, genetic high-risk women following bilateral prophylactic mastectomy
Known-group comparison and convergent validity of the BIS
| Known-group comparison | Convergent validity | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reference | Comparison groups | Results | Methodological quality | Rating | Comparison instrument | Correlations | Methodological quality | Rating |
| Anagnostopoulos et al. [ | Patients who underwent mastectomy vs. BCS vs. cancer-free women | Compared to women receiving breast-conserving surgery, women receiving mastectomy reported significantly more reduced perceived attractiveness, and greater dissatisfaction with body and appearance. | Fair | + | GHQ-28 | BIS appearance and attractiveness scale | Fair | – |
| - Social dysfunction | 0.60; 0.38 | |||||||
| - Anxiety/insomnia | 0.40; 0.26 | |||||||
| High- vs. low-social dysfunction scores | For low-social dysfunction scores, there were no significant differences in general body image concerns among the three groups of women. However, for the high-social dysfunction scores, women who had undergone mastectomy exhibited significantly higher scores on general body image concerns, compared to cancer-free and BCS women’s scores. | - Somatic complaints | 0.54; 0.41 | |||||
| Gómez-Campelo et al. [ | Age and time since diagnosis | Significantly higher BIS scores in younger patients. No significant relation between BIS and time since diagnosis. | Fair | – | RSES | − 0.73 | Fair | + |
| BDI | 0.83 | |||||||
| BAI | 0.56 | |||||||
| EORTC QLQ-C30 | − 0.63 | |||||||
| Hopwood et al. [ | Patients who underwent mastectomy vs. BCS | BIS scores were significantly higher in patients who were treated with mastectomy than those treated with BCS. | Good | + | ||||
| Age | Significantly higher BIS scores in younger patients | |||||||
| Khang et al. [ | Patients who underwent mastectomy vs. BCS vs. oncoplastic surgery | BIS scores were significantly higher in patients who were treated with mastectomy than those treated by BCS or oncoplastic surgery. However, the statistical significance was found only between the mastectomy and oncoplastic surgery subgroups. | Fair | – | BESAA | − 0.30 | Fair | – |
| RSES | − 0.12 | |||||||
| HADS total | 0.52 | |||||||
| HADS-A | 0.50 | |||||||
| HADS-D | 0.46 | |||||||
| WHOQOL-BREF | ||||||||
| - Overall QOL | − 0.22 | |||||||
| - General health | − 0.38 | |||||||
| - Physical health domain | − 0.36 | |||||||
| - Psychological domain | − 0.32 | |||||||
| - Bodily image and appearance facet | − 0.31 | |||||||
| - Social relationships domain | − 0.25 | |||||||
| - Environmental domain | − 0.30 | |||||||
| Moreira et al. [ | Patients who underwent mastectomy vs. BCS; age and time since diagnosis | BIS scores were significantly higher in patients who were treated with mastectomy than those treated with BCS. The effect size ( | Fair | – | ESS | 0.68 | Fair | – |
| DAS24 | 0.75 | |||||||
| ASI-R self-evaluative salience | 0.40 | |||||||
| ASI-R motivational salience | − 0.12 | |||||||
| WHOQOL-BREF | ||||||||
| - General health | − 0.52 | |||||||
| - Physical health domain | − 0.42 | |||||||
| - Psychological domain | − 0.49 | |||||||
| - Body image and appearance | − 0.66 | |||||||
| Rhondali et al. [ | Age | Significantly higher BIS scores in younger patients. | Poor | + | ASI-R | 0.24 | Poor | ? |
| HADS-A | 0.52 | |||||||
| HADS-D | 0.42 | |||||||
| ESAS total symptom distress score | 0.41 | |||||||
| ESAS physical distress subscore | 0.35 | |||||||
| ESAS psychological distress subscore | 0.37 | |||||||
| MBSRQ Overall appearance satisfaction item | − 0.44 | |||||||
| Van Verschuer et al. [ | Patients who underwent mastectomy vs. BCS | BIS scores were significantly higher in patients treated with mastectomy than those treated with BCS at both assessment times. The effect size ( | Fair | + | ||||
| Whistance et al. [ | Patients with a stoma vs. patients without a stoma | BIS scores were significantly higher in patients with a stoma than patients without a stoma. | Good | + | EORTC QLQ-C30 emotion function | 0.45 | Good | – |
| EORTC QLQ-C30 role function | < 0.40 (exact data not shown) | |||||||
| EORTC QLQ-C30 social function | < 0.40 (exact data not shown) | |||||||
| EORTC QLQ-C30 global quality of life | < 0.40 (exact data not shown) | |||||||
BCS breast-conserving surgery, GHQ-28 General Health Questionnaire-28, RSES Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale, BDI Beck Depression Inventory, BAI Beck Anxiety Inventory, EORTC QLQ-C30 European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire-C30, BESAA Body-Esteem Scale for Adolescents and Adults, HADS Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, WHOQOL-BREF World Health Organization Quality of Life scale-abbreviated version, ESS Experience of Shame Scale, DAS24 Derriford Appearance Scale 24, ASI-R Appearance Schemas Inventory––revised, ESAS Edmonton Symptom Assessment System
Overall rating of the results and levels of evidence of the BIS
| Measurement property | Rating of measurement property | Quality of evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Structural validity | + | Moderate |
| Internal consistency | + | Moderate |
| Reliability | + | Moderate |
| Measurement error | ? | |
| Hypothesis testing | ± | Low |
| Cross-cultural validity | NA | NA |
| Criterion validity | NA | NA |
| Responsiveness | ? |