Doctor of Physical Therapy Program, George Fox University, Newberg, Oregon.
Department of Medical Social Sciences, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois.
J Geriatr Phys Ther. 2020 Jul-Sep;43(3):142-152. doi: 10.1519/JPT.0000000000000220.
New generic patient-reported outcomes like the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) are available to physical therapists to assess physical function. However, the interpretation of the PROMIS Physical Function (PF) T-score is abstract because it references the United States average and not specific tasks. The purposes of this study were to (1) determine convergent validity of the PROMIS PF scale with physical performance tests; (2) compare predicted performance test values to normative data; and (3) identify sets of PROMIS PF items similar to performance tests that also scale in increasing difficulty and align with normative data.
Community-dwelling older adults (n = 45; age = 77.1 ± 4.6 years) were recruited for this cross-sectional analysis of PROMIS PF and physical performance tests. The modified Physical Performance Test (mPPT), a multicomponent test of mostly timed items, was completed during the same session as the PROMIS PF scale. Regression analysis examined the relationship of mPPT total and component scores (walking velocity, stair ascent, and 5 times sit to stand) with the PROMIS PF scale T-scores. Normative data were compared with regression-predicted mPPT timed performance across PROMIS PF T-scores. The PROMIS PF items most similar to walking, stair ascent, or sit to stand were identified and then PROMIS PF model parameter-calibrated T-scores for these items were compared alongside normative data.
There were statistically significant correlations (r = 0.32-0.64) between PROMIS PF T-score and mPPT total and component scores. Regression-predicted times for walking, stair ascent, and sit-to-stand tasks (based on T-scores) aligned with published normative values for older adults. Selected PF items for stair ascent and walking scaled well to discriminate increasing difficulty; however, sit-to-stand items discriminated only lower levels of functioning.
The PROMIS PF T-scores showed convergent validity with physical performance and aligned with published normative data. While the findings are not predictive of individual performance, they improve clinical interpretation by estimating a range of expected performance for walking, stair ascent, and sit to stand. These findings support application of T-scores in physical therapy testing, goal setting, and wellness plans of care for community-dwelling older adults.
新的通用患者报告结局指标,如患者报告结局测量信息系统(PROMIS),可用于评估物理治疗师的身体功能。然而,由于 PROMIS 身体功能(PF)T 评分参考的是美国平均值,而不是特定任务,因此其解释较为抽象。本研究的目的是:(1)确定 PROMIS PF 量表与身体表现测试的收敛效度;(2)将预测的表现测试值与参考值进行比较;(3)确定与表现测试相似且难度递增、与参考值一致的 PROMIS PF 项目集。
本横断面分析招募了 45 名社区居住的老年人(年龄=77.1±4.6 岁),他们完成了 PROMIS PF 和身体表现测试。改良的身体表现测试(mPPT)是一项多组件测试,主要由计时项目组成,在与 PROMIS PF 量表相同的时间内完成。回归分析考察了 mPPT 总分和分量表(行走速度、爬楼梯和 5 次坐立)与 PROMIS PF 量表 T 评分的关系。将参考值与 PROMIS PF T 评分范围内的回归预测的 mPPT 计时表现进行比较。确定与行走、爬楼梯或坐立最相似的 PROMIS PF 项目,然后比较这些项目的 PROMIS PF 模型参数校准 T 评分和参考值。
PROMIS PF T 评分与 mPPT 总分和分量表之间存在统计学上显著的相关性(r=0.32-0.64)。基于 T 评分预测的行走、爬楼梯和坐立任务时间与老年人的已发表参考值相符。用于爬楼梯和行走的特定 PF 项目在区分难度递增方面表现良好,而坐立项目仅能区分较低水平的功能。
PROMIS PF T 评分与身体表现具有收敛效度,并与已发表的参考值一致。虽然这些发现不能预测个体表现,但它们通过估计行走、爬楼梯和坐立的预期表现范围,提高了临床解释能力。这些发现支持 T 评分在物理治疗测试、目标设定和社区居住老年人的保健计划中的应用。