4.7 Article

Neuro-QOL Brief measures of health-related quality of life for clinical research in neurology

Journal

NEUROLOGY
Volume 78, Issue 23, Pages 1860-1867

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0b013e318258f744

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) [HHSN265200423601C, U01 NS 056 975 02, NHLBI K23: K23HL085766]
  2. NIH [HHSN265200423601C, HHSN260200600007C, HHS-N-260-2006-00007-C, R01HD054569-02NIDRR, 1U01NS056975-01, R01 CA104883, HHSN26520043601C, 2U54NS43011, U54RR022762, S11NS46278, N01-AG-6-0007, 1U5AR057943-01, HHSN260200600007, 1U01DK082342-01, AG-260-06-01, HD05469]
  3. Teva Pharmaceuticals
  4. American Cancer Society (national and Illinois Division)
  5. TEVA Neuro-Sciences
  6. Biogen Idec
  7. Consortium of Multiple Sclerosis Centers
  8. Enhancing Quality of Prosthetic and Orthotic Services with Process and Outcome Information, National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research [H133E080009]
  9. Rehabilitation Research and Training Center on Improving Measurement of Medical Rehabilitation Outcomes [H133B090024]
  10. National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research
  11. Midwest Regional Spinal Cord Injury Care System [H133N060014]
  12. Midwest Regional Traumatic Brain Injury Care System, National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research [H133A080045]
  13. Morris K. Udall Parkinson's Disease Research Center of Excellence from NINDS [NS-053488]
  14. Department of Health of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania [SAP4100027296]
  15. NIA [1RC2AG036498-01]
  16. NIDRR [H133B090024, OppNet: N01-AG-6-0007]
  17. Center for Disease Control and Prevention

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Objective: To address the need for brief, reliable, valid, and standardized quality of life (QOL) assessment applicable across neurologic conditions. Methods: Drawing from larger calibrated item banks, we developed short measures (8-9 items each) of 13 different QOL domains across physical, mental, and social health and evaluated their validity and reliability. Three samples were utilized during short form development: general population (Internet-based, n = 2,113); clinical panel (Internet-based, n = 553); and clinical outpatient (clinic-based, n = 581). All short forms are expressed as T scores with a mean of 50 and SD of 10. Results: Internal consistency (Cronbach alpha) of the 13 short forms ranged from 0.85 to 0.97. Correlations between short form and full-length item bank scores ranged from 0.88 to 0.99 (0.82-0.96 after removing common items from banks). Online respondents were asked whether they had any of 19 different chronic health conditions, and whether or not those reported conditions interfered with ability to function normally. All short forms, across physical, mental, and social health, were able to separate people who reported no health condition from those who reported 1-2 or 3 or more. In addition, scores on all 13 domains were worse for people who acknowledged being limited by the health conditions they reported, compared to those who reported conditions but were not limited by them. Conclusion: These 13 brief measures of self-reported QOL are reliable and show preliminary evidence of concurrent validity inasmuch as they differentiate people based upon number of reported health conditions and whether those reported conditions impede normal function. Neurology (R) 2012;78:1860-1867

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