4.5 Article

Efficiency of static and computer adaptive short forms compared to full-length measures of depressive symptoms

期刊

QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH
卷 19, 期 1, 页码 125-136

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11136-009-9560-5

关键词

Computer adaptive testing; PROMIS; Item response theory; Short form; Two-stage testing

资金

  1. NIHU-01 AR 052177-04
  2. cooperative agreements to a Statistical Coordinating Center [U01AR52177]
  3. six Primary Research Sites [U01AR52186, U01AR52181, U01AR52155, U01AR52158, U01AR52170, U01AR52171]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Short-form patient-reported outcome measures are popular because they minimize patient burden. We assessed the efficiency of static short forms and computer adaptive testing (CAT) using data from the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) project. We evaluated the 28-item PROMIS depressive symptoms bank. We used post hoc simulations based on the PROMIS calibration sample to compare several short-form selection strategies and the PROMIS CAT to the total item bank score. Compared with full-bank scores, all short forms and CAT produced highly correlated scores, but CAT outperformed each static short form in almost all criteria. However, short-form selection strategies performed only marginally worse than CAT. The performance gap observed in static forms was reduced by using a two-stage branching test format. Using several polytomous items in a calibrated unidimensional bank to measure depressive symptoms yielded a CAT that provided marginally superior efficiency compared to static short forms. The efficiency of a two-stage semi-adaptive testing strategy was so close to CAT that it warrants further consideration and study.

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