4.6 Article

How Item Banks and Their Application Can Influence Measurement Practice in Rehabilitation Medicine: A PROMIS Fatigue Item Bank Example

Journal

ARCHIVES OF PHYSICAL MEDICINE AND REHABILITATION
Volume 92, Issue 10, Pages S20-S27

Publisher

W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.apmr.2010.08.033

Keywords

Computerized adaptive test (CAT); fatigue; Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS); Rehabilitation; Short form

Funding

  1. Statistical Coordinating Center (Northwestern University) [U01AR52177]
  2. six Primary Research Sites (Duke University) [U01AR52186, U01AR52181, U01AR52155, U01AR52158, U01AR52170, U01AR52171]

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Lai J-S, Cella D, Choi S, Junghaenel DU, Christodoulou C, Gershon R, Stone A. How item banks and their application can influence measurement practice in rehabilitation medicine: a PROMIS fatigue item bank example. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 2011;92(10 Suppl 1):S20-7. Objective: To illustrate how measurement practices can be advanced by using as an example the fatigue item bank (FIB) and its applications (short forms and computerized adaptive testing [CAT]) that were developed through the National Institutes of Health Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) Cooperative Group. Design: Psychometric analysis of data collected by an Internet survey company using item response theory-related techniques. Setting: A U.S. general population representative sample collected through the Internet. Participants: Respondents used for dimensionality evaluation of the PROMIS FIB (N=603) and item calibrations (N=14,931). Interventions: Not applicable. Main Outcome Measures: Fatigue items (112) developed by the PROMIS fatigue domain working group, 13-item Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Fatigue, and 4-item Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short Form Health Survey Vitality scale. Results: The PROM'S FIB version 1, which consists of 95 items, showed acceptable psychometric properties. CAT showed consistently better precision than short forms. However, all 3 short forms showed good precision for most participants in that more than 95% of the sample could be measured precisely with reliability greater than 0 9 Conclusions: Measurement practice can be advanced by using a psychometrically sound measurement tool and its applications. This example shows that CAT and short forms derived from the PROMIS FIB can reliably estimate fatigue reported by the U.S. general population. Evaluation in clinical populations is warranted before the item bank can be used for clinical trials.

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