Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, USA.
Department of Psychology, University of Massachusetts Lowell, Lowell, Massachusetts, USA.
J Neurotrauma. 2022 Jun;39(11-12):870-878. doi: 10.1089/neu.2021.0421.
The Glasgow Outcome Scale-Extended (GOSE) is a functional outcome measure intended to place individuals with traumatic brain injury (TBI) into one of eight broad levels of injury-related disability. This simplicity is not always optimal, particularly when more granular assessment of individuals' injury recovery is desired. The GOSE, however, is customarily assessed using a multi-question interview that contains richer information than is reflected in the GOSE score. Using data from the multi-center Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in TBI (TRACK-TBI) study (N = 1544), we used item response theory (IRT) to evaluate whether rescoring the GOSE using IRT, which posits that a continuous latent variable (disability) underlies responses, can yield a more precise index of injury-related functional limitations. We fit IRT models to GOSE interview responses collected at three months post-injury. Each participant's level of functional limitation was estimated from the model (GOSE-IRT) and comparisons were made between IRT-based and standard (GOSE-Ordinal) scores. The IRT scoring resulted in 141 possible scores (vs. 7 GOSE-Ordinal scores in this sample of individuals with GOSE scores ranging between 2 and 8). Moreover, GOSE-IRT scores were significantly more strongly associated with measures of TBI-related symptoms, psychological symptoms, and quality of life. Our findings demonstrate that rescoring the GOSE interview using IRT yields more granular, meaningful measurement of injury-related functional limitations, while adding no additional respondent or examiner burden. This technique may have utility for many applications, such as clinical trials aiming to detect small treatment effects, and small-scale studies that need to maximize statistical efficiency.
格拉斯哥结局量表-扩展版(GOSE)是一种旨在将创伤性脑损伤(TBI)患者分为八个广泛的损伤相关残疾水平之一的功能结果测量。这种简单性并不总是最佳的,特别是当需要更精细地评估个体的损伤恢复情况时。然而,GOSE 通常通过包含比 GOSE 评分更丰富信息的多项问题访谈进行评估。利用来自多中心转化研究和临床知识在 TBI(TRACK-TBI)研究(N=1544)的数据,我们使用项目反应理论(IRT)评估使用 IRT 重新评分 GOSE 是否可行,IRT 假设连续潜在变量(残疾)是反应的基础,是否可以更准确地衡量与损伤相关的功能限制。我们拟合了三个月后采集的 GOSE 访谈反应的 IRT 模型。从模型中估计每个参与者的功能限制水平(GOSE-IRT),并对基于 IRT 和标准(GOSE-Ordinal)的评分进行比较。IRT 评分产生了 141 个可能的分数(而在这个范围为 2 到 8 的 GOSE 分数的个体样本中,GOSE-Ordinal 分数只有 7 个)。此外,GOSE-IRT 评分与 TBI 相关症状、心理症状和生活质量的测量指标显著更相关。我们的研究结果表明,使用 IRT 重新评分 GOSE 访谈可以更细致、更有意义地测量与损伤相关的功能限制,同时不会增加受访者或评估员的负担。这种技术可能在许多应用中有用,例如旨在检测小的治疗效果的临床试验,以及需要最大化统计效率的小规模研究。