Oort Q, Dirven L, Meijer W, Sikkes S A M, Uitdehaag B M J, Reijneveld J C, Taphoorn M J B
Department of Neurology and Brain Tumor Center Amsterdam, VU University Medical Center, PO Box 7057, 1007 MB, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Department of Neurology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The Netherlands.
J Neurooncol. 2017 Mar;132(1):145-153. doi: 10.1007/s11060-016-2352-1. Epub 2017 Feb 1.
Both dementia and brain tumor patients exhibit cognitive decline during the course of their disease. They might therefore experience similar problems with cognitively complex daily activities (i.e., instrumental activities of daily living (IADL)). The study's objective is to evaluate if the Amsterdam IADL Questionnaire (A-IADL-Q), a 70-item IADL questionnaire developed for and validated in early dementia patients, is also applicable to glioma patients. The evaluation consisted of three steps. Predetermined decision rules defined which activities were retained, altered, added or excluded. In the first step, 6 neuro-oncology health care professionals (HCP) and 10 glioma patient-proxy dyads were asked to evaluate the 70 A-IADL-Q activities. In the second step, in-depth interviews were conducted with 6 HCPs and 6 other patient-proxy dyads to generate relevant activities specific to glioma patients not covered by the A-IADL-Q. In the third step, 6 new patient-proxy dyads were cognitively debriefed with the list of activities constructed in the previous steps. Results indicated that in step 1, after alterations and exclusions, 28/70 activities could be retained. Nine newly generated activities were subsequently added in step 2. In step 3, the 37 activities were presented to the patient-proxy dyads. Based on their input, several additional alterations and exclusions were made resulting in a list of 32 activities. In conclusion, this evaluation of the A-IADL-Q showed that dementia-specific IADL activities are only partly applicable to glioma patients, and that the addition of glioma specific IADL activities is necessary to capture the IADL construct. This underlines the need for a disease-specific IADL questionnaire for brain tumor patients.
痴呆症患者和脑肿瘤患者在疾病过程中都会出现认知能力下降。因此,他们在认知复杂的日常活动(即工具性日常生活活动 (IADL))中可能会遇到类似的问题。该研究的目的是评估阿姆斯特丹IADL问卷(A-IADL-Q),这是一份为早期痴呆症患者开发并经过验证的包含70个条目的IADL问卷,是否也适用于胶质瘤患者。评估包括三个步骤。预先确定的决策规则定义了哪些活动被保留、更改、添加或排除。在第一步中,6名神经肿瘤医疗保健专业人员(HCP)和10对胶质瘤患者-代理人二元组被要求评估70项A-IADL-Q活动。在第二步中,对6名HCP和6对其他患者-代理人二元组进行了深入访谈,以生成A-IADL-Q未涵盖的与胶质瘤患者相关的特定活动。在第三步中,对6对新的患者-代理人二元组就前几步构建的活动列表进行了认知汇报。结果表明,在第一步中,经过更改和排除后,可以保留28/70项活动。随后在第二步中添加了9项新生成的活动。在第三步中,将这37项活动呈现给患者-代理人二元组。根据他们的意见,又进行了一些额外的更改和排除,最终得到了一份包含32项活动的列表。总之,对A-IADL-Q的这项评估表明,针对痴呆症的IADL活动仅部分适用于胶质瘤患者,并且有必要添加针对胶质瘤的特定IADL活动以涵盖IADL结构。这突出了为脑肿瘤患者制定针对特定疾病的IADL问卷的必要性。