Nuffield Department of Population Health, Health Services Research Unit, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRC) Oxford, Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust, Oxford, UK.
Qual Life Res. 2021 Jun;30(6):1641-1652. doi: 10.1007/s11136-021-02762-z. Epub 2021 Feb 11.
The aim of this study was to validate the Long-Term Conditions Questionnaire (LTCQ) among patients using memory clinic services in England. LTCQ is a short self-administered measure of 'living well with long-term conditions' that has not been previously tested in patients with cognitive impairment.
The mixed-methods study included cognitive interviews to test the comprehensibility and content validity of LTCQ from the patient's perspective, followed by a pilot survey to test the measure's internal consistency, construct validity, structural validity, and responsiveness. Participants were recruited through memory clinics following a diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment or dementia.
Interview respondents (n = 12) all found LTCQ's content relevant, with only minor formatting modifications required. Among survey respondents (n = 105), most patients (86%) were able to self-report answers to LTCQ. High multimorbidity among the sample was associated with reduced LTCQ and EQ-5D scores. Internal consistency of LTCQ was high (Cronbach's α = 0.93), no floor or ceiling effects were observed, and missing data levels were low. Factor analysis results further supported LTCQ's structural validity, and predicted positive correlation with EQ-5D indicated construct validity. Score changes observed in a four-month follow-up survey (n = 61) are suggestive of LTCQ's responsiveness.
LTCQ is a valid means of assessing health-related quality of life for people living with cognitive impairment (including dementia) in the early period of support following diagnosis. Owing to high levels of multimorbidity in this patient population, LTCQ offers an advantage over dementia-specific measures in capturing the cumulative impact of all LTCs experienced by the patient.
本研究旨在验证英国记忆门诊患者使用的长期疾病问卷(LTCQ)。LTCQ 是一种简短的自我管理工具,用于评估“与长期疾病共存的良好生活状态”,以前并未在认知障碍患者中进行过测试。
该混合方法研究包括认知访谈,从患者角度测试 LTCQ 的理解性和内容效度,随后进行试点调查以测试该测量工具的内部一致性、结构有效性、结构有效性和反应性。参与者通过记忆诊所招募,这些参与者在被诊断为轻度认知障碍或痴呆症后接受了治疗。
受访者(n=12)均发现 LTCQ 的内容相关,仅需进行一些小的格式修改。在调查受访者(n=105)中,大多数患者(86%)能够自行报告 LTCQ 的答案。样本中高度的多种合并症与 LTCQ 和 EQ-5D 评分降低有关。LTCQ 的内部一致性很高(Cronbach's α=0.93),未观察到地板或天花板效应,且缺失数据水平较低。因子分析结果进一步支持 LTCQ 的结构有效性,与 EQ-5D 的预测正相关表明其具有结构有效性。在为期四个月的随访调查(n=61)中观察到的评分变化表明 LTCQ 具有反应性。
LTCQ 是评估认知障碍(包括痴呆症)患者在诊断后早期支持阶段健康相关生活质量的有效方法。由于该患者人群存在多种合并症,LTCQ 优于专门针对痴呆症的措施,可更全面地捕捉患者经历的所有 LTC 的累积影响。