Vercelli Stefano, Zampogna Elisabetta, Negrini Francesco, Pietraroia Chiara, D'Antona Giuseppe, Papa Sonia, Soldini Emiliano, Barbero Marco, Glynn Nancy W, Beretta-Piccoli Matteo
Rehabilitation Research Laboratory 2rLab, Department of Business Economics, Health and Social Care, University of Applied Sciences and Arts of Southern Switzerland, Manno, Switzerland.
Division of Pulmonary Rehabilitation, Istituti Clinici Scientifici Maugeri IRCCS, Scientific Institute of Tradate, Tradate, Italy.
BMC Geriatr. 2024 Dec 19;24(1):1016. doi: 10.1186/s12877-024-05603-z.
Older adults experience fatigue which impacts health-related quality of life. The Pittsburgh Fatigability Scale (PFS) was specifically designed to assess perceived physical and mental fatigability in older adults. The aim of this study was to translate the PFS into Italian (PFS-I) and to investigate its psychometric properties.
The PFS-I was translated in accordance with international standards. The following properties were evaluated: structural validity, internal consistency, hypotheses testing for construct validity, test-retest reliability using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC), and minimal clinically important difference (MCID) for responsiveness.
The study included 87 older adults with cardiovascular/respiratory diseases (CVRD), 46 with Parkinson disease (PD), and 67 healthy controls (HC). The PFS-I Physical and Mental subscales scores were significantly different in these populations, with HC reporting the lowest fatigability. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis showed a two-factor structure for both subscales, with good internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha: 0.86 and 0.89, respectively). The PFS-I Physical subscale showed weak goodness-of-fit of the confirmatory factor analysis models, whereas the PFS-I Mental subscale was deemed acceptable. Construct validity of the PFS-I was excellent with 75% (18 out of 24) of hypotheses accepted. Test-retest reliability was analyzed in a subset of 23 patients with CVRD and showed excellent results for both the PFS-I Physical and Mental subscales (ICC = 0.93 and 0.92, respectively). MCID ranged between 6 and 7 points for the Physical and 7-9 points for the Mental subscale.
The PFS-I is a valid, reliable, and responsive instrument to assess perceived fatigability for healthy older adults as well as those with CRVD and PD.
老年人会经历疲劳,这会影响与健康相关的生活质量。匹兹堡疲劳量表(PFS)专门用于评估老年人感知到的身体和精神疲劳程度。本研究的目的是将PFS翻译成意大利语版本(PFS-I)并研究其心理测量学特性。
PFS-I按照国际标准进行翻译。评估了以下特性:结构效度、内部一致性、构建效度的假设检验、使用组内相关系数(ICC)的重测信度以及反应度的最小临床重要差异(MCID)。
该研究纳入了87名患有心血管/呼吸系统疾病(CVRD)的老年人、46名帕金森病(PD)患者和67名健康对照者(HC)。这些人群中PFS-I身体和精神分量表得分存在显著差异,HC报告的疲劳程度最低。探索性和验证性因素分析表明两个分量表均为双因素结构,内部一致性良好(Cronbach's alpha系数分别为0.86和0.89)。PFS-I身体分量表的验证性因素分析模型拟合优度较弱,而PFS-I精神分量表被认为可以接受。PFS-I的构建效度极佳,24个假设中有75%(18个)被接受。在23名CVRD患者的子集中分析了重测信度,结果显示PFS-I身体和精神分量表均有出色表现(ICC分别为0.93和0.92)。身体分量表的MCID在6至7分之间,精神分量表的MCID在7至9分之间。
PFS-I是一种有效、可靠且具有反应度的工具,可用于评估健康老年人以及患有CVRD和PD的老年人的感知疲劳程度。