4.1 Article

The McGill Denture Satisfaction Questionnaire revisited: Exploratory factor analysis of a binational sample

Journal

GERODONTOLOGY
Volume 37, Issue 3, Pages 233-243

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ger.12477

Keywords

complete denture; patient satisfaction; questionnaires; treatment outcome

Funding

  1. National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research [DE017882, DE023518]
  2. Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de Sao Paulo [11/00688-7, 11/233470]
  3. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec -Sante [252635]

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Objectives To examine the McGill Denture Satisfaction Questionnaire (MDSQ) in terms of dimensionality, item reduction and construct validity in a binational sample of complete denture wearers. Materials and Methods We conducted secondary analyses of baseline data from two studies on implant-retained overdentures: a quasi-experimental study in the United States (n = 145) and a randomised trial in Brazil (n = 120). All participants wore upper/lower dentures and responded at baseline to the MDSQ items concerning their original mandibular dentures. A putative model of the MDSQ items resulted in two question subsets: (a) overall satisfaction, retention/stability, aesthetics, cleaning, speech and comfort, plus general chewing ability; (b) mastication of specific foods. Analyses focused on the internal consistency of each subset and possible item reduction, using Cronbach's alpha (C alpha), inter-item correlation and exploratory factor analysis (EFA). Results The 1st subset showed high inter-item correlation for most question combinations and no redundancy (r <= .8). An item on cleaning had low correlation, but its removal does not increase internal consistency (C alpha >= .83). Results were similar for both studies, with EFA showing a single significant factor (namely overall satisfaction, lower denture) able to explain nearly 54% of the variance. The 2nd subset also shows strong internal consistency (C alpha >= .95) and inter-item correlation, with a single factor representing 65% of the variation. Conclusions This study discloses the reliability and construct validity of the MDSQ for patient-centred evaluation of complete dental prostheses in the edentulous mandible. Findings also support the use of both overall satisfaction and masticatory ability as summary scores, for improved outcome assessment.

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