| Literature DB >> 29757308 |
Michelle K White1, Martha S Bayliss1, Spencer D Guthrie2, Kimberly P Raymond1, Avery A Rizio1, Kristen L McCausland1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This study examined the content validity of the SF-36v2® Health Survey (SF-36v2) in patients with AL amyloidosis using qualitative interviews with physicians and patients. The study included three distinct phases of qualitative research: concept elicitation interviews among physicians, concept elicitation interviews among patients, and cognitive debriefing interviews among patients. The concept elicitation interviews focused on areas of health-related quality of life that are affected by AL amyloidosis and may be affected by treatment, while patient cognitive debriefings aimed to confirm whether the SF-36v2 instructions, recall period, items, and response choices were comprehensive and understandable to AL amyloidosis patients.Entities:
Keywords: Amyloidosis; Content validation; Qualitative research; Quality of life; SF-36v2
Year: 2017 PMID: 29757308 PMCID: PMC5934916 DOI: 10.1186/s41687-017-0020-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Patient Rep Outcomes ISSN: 2509-8020
Fig. 1Description of study methodology, divided by interview type
Physician demographic characteristics
| Demographic Information | N (%) |
|---|---|
| Type of Primary Practice | |
| Hematologist | 3 (75) |
| Nephrologist | 1 (25) |
| Gender | |
| Male | 2 (50) |
| Female | 2 (50) |
| Region of Practice | |
| East Coast | 2 (50) |
| Midwest | 1 (25) |
| International (Germany) | 1 (25) |
| Type of Amyloidosis Treated | |
| AL amyloidosis only | 2 (50) |
| AL amyloidosis & other forms | 2 (50) |
| Years in Practice (post-residency) | |
| ≥ 5 to <10 | 1 (25) |
| ≥ 10 to <20 | 3 (75) |
Patient demographic characteristics
| Concept Elicitation | Cognitive Debriefing | |
|---|---|---|
| Demographic Information | Mean (Range), years | |
| Age | 57.2 (41–76) | 63.30 (39–74) |
| Time since diagnosis | 2.3 (0.33–8) | 4.18 (0.50–18) |
| Time from first symptom to diagnosis | 2 (0.25–4) | – |
| N (%) | ||
| Gender | ||
| Male | 6 (60) | 5 (50) |
| Female | 4 (40) | 5 (50) |
| Region of U.S. Residence | ||
| South | 4 (40) | 0 (0) |
| Midwest | 3 (30) | 0 (0) |
| East Coast | 2 (20) | 10 (100) |
| West Coast | 1 (10) | 0 (0) |
| Education | ||
| Less than Bachelor’s degree | 4 (40) | 5 (50) |
| Bachelor’s degree | 3 (30) | 2 (20) |
| Post-graduate | 3 (30) | 3 (30) |
| Multiple Organ Involvement | ||
| Yes | 5 (50) | 4 (40) |
| No | 5 (50) | 6 (60) |
| Organs Affecteda | ||
| Heart | 6 (60) | 5 (50) |
| Kidney | 5 (50) | 6 (60) |
| Gastrointestinal Tract | 3 (30) | 0 (0) |
| Nervous System | 2 (20) | 1 (10) |
| Liver | 0 (0) | 1 (10) |
| Bladder | 0 (0) | 1 (10) |
| Remission Status | ||
| Full Remission | 5 (50) | 2 (20) |
| Partial Remission | 1 (10) | 3 (30) |
| Not in Remission | 4 (40) | 4 (40) |
| Unsure | 0 (0) | 1 (10) |
| Current Treatmenta | ||
| Bortezomib (Velcade) | 4 (40) | – |
| Dexamethasone | 3 (30) | – |
| Doxycycline | 2 (20) | – |
| Lenalidomide (Revlimid) | 2 (20) | – |
| Other | 2 (20) | – |
aPatients were able to select more than one option, so percentages exceed 100
– indicates that data were not collected for this variable
Patient quotes on impacts of AL amyloidosis on HRQoL
| Theme | Subtheme | Number of patients reporting impact ( | Representative patient quotation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Social | Social | 10 | I used to be very busy with friends and cook and work and run a church. Now, I am mostly home [the] majority of the time because you don’t feel able enough to go out or the medicine that you are on makes it hard for you to go out. |
| Leisure time | 9 | So, we had to go home and cancel our life. We had a cruise planned and paid for and birthdays and parties and things like people do. | |
| Hobbies | 4 | I really, really miss being able to hike, I miss being able to train. I did a lot of training of our animals...and I miss being able to do that a lot because that was very satisfying to me. Those are things that really bother me. | |
| Physical | Mobility | 9 | Bathtubs and showers are the hardest and getting cleaned up, it makes me very short of breath. |
| Exercise | 6 | I have worsened to the point where I can’t even walk up a flight of stairs without buckling over. I’m just really struggling for air. | |
| Appetite/Food restrictions | 5 | I started to lose some of my appetite. Not the least of which is because now I can’t taste… my mouth wasn’t producing much saliva. Everything tastes like cardboard. Disgusting. | |
| Roles | Work | 7 | It’s caused me to have a lot of absences, which I have never had. For a while there it seemed like I was going to the doctor every other day I’m sure that affected my performance at work. Although I tried to be mindful of it, I don’t think you can totally just [block] out all that stuff. |
| Family roles | 9 | Even something like getting the screens on the windows. I’ve got to go up a bunch of flights of stairs to do that. I can’t get that done. I feel totally useless in that regard and that’s part of the depression. What am I going to do? Do I put everything on my wife? I can’t do that for God sakes. That has been affected big time. | |
| Household chores | 5 | Ability to take care of the home is gone. I can’t do anything. | |
| Emotions | Anger | 3 | I just think that people not listening just made me angry. Not that I vented at them, but I felt betrayed. I guess I had always had doctors that listened and I don’t know whether changing from where I live to a bigger city, they just didn’t seem to hear me. |
| Worry | 8 | I have so much more concern with, you know, what’s going to happen to [my children]. You know, what happens if I die next year. | |
| Cognition | 5 | But when I have those spells where I kind of just go away for a while, I think well I’m not able to concentrate, I can’t…how am I going to finish this task? I can’t seem to keep my mind on it. | |
| Depression | 5 | Not knowing what it is at that point was very scary…It was very depressing at first and very hard to understand because…I didn’t have a clue at first of what it was or what it did or how it would affect my life…It |
Patient quotes from cognitive debriefing interviews
| Element of SF-36v2 Survey | Interview Guide Question | Representative Patient Quote |
|---|---|---|
| Format and ease | Describe how well you were able to answer the questions overall. | For the most part easy, they weren’t difficult. Trying to determine which shade of something…sometimes you have to think those through. |
| Instructions | Were the instructions easy to understand? Why or why not? | Those were really clear. |
| Item relevance | Which questions were most relevant for describing how you feel and what you are able to do? | I think the daily activity is most relevant. Probably second [most relevant] would be the social. Because I don’t socialize anymore, it is an important area for me. Obviously, [my social life] has been declining as a result of AL amyloidosis. |
| How do these questions relate to your experience with AL? | Overall they are zeroing in on how I physically am and they are also trying to make sure that my mental health can handle it I guess. It’s apparent. I think those are good issues because, like I said, everybody is different. | |
| Ability to detect change over time | Do you think that your answers on this would change as you felt sicker or more well on different medications? | Well, the reality of it is, when the disease is more active or when your symptoms are more active, I think that your answers would tend to be different than when you’re in, and I won’t say I’m in remission, because you don’t have a remission with the disease. But when you’re not being challenged as much by the symptoms of the disease, you would answer it different. |
| Response options | How easy or hard was it for you to answer the questions using the answer choices that are listed? | I would say very easy, and I would say very easy for any person. You know the difference between severe and none. |
| Recall period, 4 weeks | How easy or hard was it for you to think about the past 4 weeks when you were choosing your answers? | … for the past 4 weeks, I can pretty much remember what that’s about. It’s a workable unit. I can think back and say, ‘Oh yeah, in 4 weeks I haven’t…’ |
| Recall period, 12 months | And so the one question that asked about the past year, how difficult was that, to think back for one year? | That’s easy. That’s a good question. I think, over a year, it’s easy. And it’s significant. That’s why they have us doing an annual review over a year, it’s significant. So I have no problem with that. |
| Item content analysis | So now we’re going to go back to any questions that you thought were not clear…Did you mark any that you felt that they weren’t completely clear? | ‘I expect my health to get worse.’ I hope not, but I don’t know. Now, guess what? Friday I might know, but right now I don’t know. So they’re kind of a guess, to be honest with you. |
| So, now we are going to go back to any questions or sections that you thought were not clear, so any place where you might have put a question mark. So, which one was the first that you marked? | 'In general, would you say your health is excellent, very good, fair, or poor?' So, it’s subjective. I guess I don’t know if it’s asking me how I feel, like how I feel about my health as opposed to how my health actually is. I guess I could be wrong. So, I could be saying my health is good when it’s actually not. |
Areas of HRQoL impacted by AL amyloidosis mapped onto SF-36v2 domains
| Source | Physical Functioning | Role-Physical | Bodily Pain | General Health | Vitality | Social Functioning | Role-Emotional | Mental Health |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Literature Reviewa | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x |
| Clinician Concept Elicitation | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | |
| Patient Concept Elicitation | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x |
| Patient Cognitive Debriefing | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x |
| Lin, 2015 Patient Concept Elicitation | x | x | x | x | x | x | x |
aIncludes literature reviewed in the current study and in Lin et al., 2015