4.3 Article

Development of an item bank for measuring prosthetic mobility in people with lower limb amputation: The Prosthetic Limb Users Survey of Mobility (PLUS-M)

Journal

PM&R
Volume 15, Issue 4, Pages 456-473

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pmrj.12962

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A PROM called the Prosthetic Limb Users Survey of Mobility (PLUS-M) was developed to measure prosthetic mobility in lower limb amputees. Two short forms with different item lengths were created based on a cross-sectional study. The PLUS-M instruments demonstrated good readability, wide measurement range, strong correlation with existing PROMs, and ability to differentiate between groups with different levels of mobility.
Background: Achieving mobility with a prosthesis is a common post-amputation rehabilitation goal and primary outcome in prosthetic research studies. Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) available to measure prosthetic mobility have practical and psychometric limitations that inhibit their use in clinical care and research.Objective: To develop a brief, clinically meaningful, and psychometrically robust PROM to measure prosthetic mobility.Design: A cross-sectional study was conducted to administer previously developed candidate items to a national sample of lower limb prosthesis users. Items were calibrated to an item response theory model and two fixed-length short forms were created. Instruments were assessed for readability, effective range of measurement, agreement with the full item bank, ceiling and floor effects, convergent validity, and known groups validity.Setting: Participants were recruited using flyers posted in hospitals and prosthetics clinics across the United States, magazine advertisements, notices posted to consumer websites, and direct mailings.Participants: Adult prosthesis users (N = 1091) with unilateral lower limb amputation due to traumatic or dysvascular causes.Interventions: Not applicable.Main Outcome Measures: Candidate items (N = 105) were administered along with the Patient Reported Outcome Measurement Information System Brief Profile, Prosthesis Evaluation Questionnaire - Mobility Subscale, and Activities-Specific Balance Confidence Scale, and questions created to characterize respondents.Results: A bank of 44 calibrated self-report items, termed the Prosthetic Limb Users Survey of Mobility (PLUS-M), was produced. Clinical and statistical criteria were used to select items for 7- and 12-item short forms. PLUS-M instruments had an 8th grade reading level, measured with precision across a wide range of respondents, exhibited little-to-no ceiling or floor effects, correlated expectedly with scores from existing PROMs, and differentiated between groups of respondents expected to have different levels of mobility.Conclusion: The PLUS-M appears to be well suited to measuring prosthetic mobility in people with lower limb amputation. PLUS-M instruments are recommended for use in clinical and research settings.

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