University of California, San Francisco.
San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Francisco, California.
Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken). 2019 Jul;71(7):925-935. doi: 10.1002/acr.23723. Epub 2019 Jun 11.
Most studies that have evaluated patient-reported outcomes, such as those utilizing the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) Physical Function Short Form 10a (PF10a) in rheumatoid arthritis (RA), have been performed in white and English-speaking populations. The aim of our study was to assess the measurement properties of the PF10a in a racially/ethnically diverse population with RA and to determine the effect of non-English language proficiency, insurance status, and race/ethnicity on the validity and responsiveness of the PF10a.
Data were abstracted from electronic health records for all RA patients seen in a university-based rheumatology clinic between 2013 and 2017. We evaluated the use of the PF10a, floor and ceiling effects, and construct validity across categories of language preference, insurance, and race/ethnicity. We used standardized response means and linear mixed-effects models to evaluate the responsiveness of the PF10a to longitudinal changes in the Clinical Disease Activity Index (CDAI) across population subgroups.
We included 595 patients in a cross-sectional analysis of validity and 341 patients in longitudinal responsiveness analyses of the PF10a. The PF10a had acceptable floor and ceiling effects and was successfully implemented. We observed good construct validity and responsiveness to changes in CDAI among white subjects, English speakers, and privately insured patients. However, constructs evaluated by the PF10a were less correlated with clinical measures among Chinese speakers and Hispanic subjects, and less sensitive to clinical improvements among Medicaid patients and Spanish speakers.
While the PF10a has good measurement properties and is both practical and acceptable for implementation in routine clinical practice, we also found important differences across racial/ethnic groups and those with limited English proficiency that warrant further investigation.
大多数评估患者报告结局的研究,如利用患者报告结局测量信息系统(PROMIS)物理功能简短表 10a(PF10a)评估类风湿关节炎(RA)的研究,都是在白人和英语人群中进行的。我们的研究目的是评估 PF10a 在具有 RA 的多种族/族裔人群中的测量特性,并确定非英语语言能力、保险状况和种族/族裔对 PF10a 的有效性和反应性的影响。
从 2013 年至 2017 年在大学附属医院的风湿病诊所就诊的所有 RA 患者的电子健康记录中提取数据。我们评估了 PF10a 的使用情况、地板和天花板效应以及在语言偏好、保险和种族/族裔类别之间的结构有效性。我们使用标准化反应均值和线性混合效应模型来评估 PF10a 在临床疾病活动指数(CDAI)的纵向变化的反应性在人群亚组中。
我们在 PF10a 的有效性的横断面分析中纳入了 595 例患者,在 PF10a 的纵向反应性分析中纳入了 341 例患者。PF10a 具有可接受的地板和天花板效应,并成功实施。我们观察到 PF10a 在白种人、英语使用者和私人保险患者中具有良好的结构有效性和对 CDAI 变化的反应性。然而,PF10a 评估的结构在汉语使用者和西班牙裔患者中与临床测量的相关性较差,在医疗补助患者和西班牙语使用者中对临床改善的敏感性较低。
虽然 PF10a 具有良好的测量特性,并且在常规临床实践中既实用又易于实施,但我们也发现了不同种族/族裔群体和英语能力有限的人群之间的重要差异,需要进一步研究。