von Steinbuechel Nicole, Zeldovich Marina, Bockhop Fabian, Krenz Ugne, Timmermann Dagmar, Buchheim Anna, Koerte Inga K, Bonfert Michaela Veronika, Berweck Steffen, Kieslich Matthias, Brockmann Knut, Roediger Maike, Greving Sven, Neu Axel, Wartemann Ulrike, Suss Joachim, Auer Christian, Muehlan Holger, Cunitz Katrin
Institute of Psychology, University of Innsbruck, Universitaetsstr. 5-7, Innsbruck, 6020, Austria.
Faculty of Psychotherapy Science, Sigmund Freud University Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
J Patient Rep Outcomes. 2025 May 14;9(1):53. doi: 10.1186/s41687-025-00890-5.
To date, there are no age-appropriate instruments for assessing the subjective impact of pediatric traumatic brain injury (TBI) sequelae on multiple domains of health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in young children. The present study therefore aims to develop and examine the psychometric properties of a new disease-specific, self-reported HRQoL instrument, the Quality of Life after Brain Injury for children aged 6-7 years (QOLIBRI-KIDDY). Questionnaire development included focus group interviews, cognitive debriefings, and Delphi expert panels. The pilot version of the instrument was tested in 72 children (6.00-7.92 years of age; 60% boys; 86% after mild TBI). After item reduction based on a confirmatory scale analysis considering the six-factor structure of the questionnaire versions for older children, adolescents, and adults (Cognition, Self, Daily Life & Autonomy, Social Relationships, Emotions, Physical Problems), its reliability and validity were investigated. The final version of the QOLIBRI-KIDDY comprises 23 items. Psychometric analyses indicated internal consistency to be satisfactory (ɑ = 0.49-0.72; ω = 0.57-0.78). Construct validity suggested the expected overlap between generic HRQoL and TBI-specific HRQoL (r = 0.17-0.36). There were small (r > 0.2) to moderate (r > 0.3) correlations between lower TBI-specific HRQoL and participants with lower learning rates, anxiety, depression, and post-concussion symptoms, particularly on the Cognition, Social Relationships, Emotions, and Physical Problems scales. The comparison of known groups revealed significant moderate and significant effects for lower HRQoL in children with depressive symptoms on the Emotions scale (d = - 0.46) and with post-concussion symptoms on the Cognition (d = - 0.42) and Social Relationships scales (d = - 0.56). The QOLIBRI-KIDDY is a comprehensive, yet economical tool, comparable in content and items to the other age-adapted QOLIBRI versions. Its application has the potential to provide longitudinal data on subjects after TBI from childhood to older age, with a subjective perspective that can contribute to improving the therapy, rehabilitation, and daily life of young children.
迄今为止,尚无适合儿童年龄的工具来评估小儿创伤性脑损伤(TBI)后遗症对幼儿健康相关生活质量(HRQoL)多个领域的主观影响。因此,本研究旨在开发并检验一种新的针对特定疾病的自我报告HRQoL工具,即6 - 7岁儿童脑损伤后生活质量量表(QOLIBRI - KIDDY)的心理测量特性。问卷开发包括焦点小组访谈、认知反馈和德尔菲专家小组。该工具的试用版在72名儿童(年龄6.00 - 7.92岁;60%为男孩;86%为轻度TBI后)中进行了测试。在基于考虑针对较大儿童、青少年和成人问卷版本的六因素结构(认知、自我、日常生活与自主性、社会关系、情绪、身体问题)的验证性量表分析进行项目删减后,对其信效度进行了研究。QOLIBRI - KIDDY的最终版本包含23个项目。心理测量分析表明内部一致性令人满意(ɑ = 0.49 - 0.72;ω = 0.57 - 0.78)。结构效度表明一般HRQoL与TBI特异性HRQoL之间存在预期的重叠(r = 0.17 - 0.36)。较低的TBI特异性HRQoL与学习率较低、焦虑、抑郁和脑震荡后症状的参与者之间存在小(r > 0.2)到中等(r > 0.3)的相关性,特别是在认知、社会关系、情绪和身体问题量表上。已知组的比较显示,情绪量表上有抑郁症状的儿童(d = - 0.46)以及认知(d = - 0.42)和社会关系量表上有脑震荡后症状的儿童,其HRQoL较低,存在显著的中等效应。QOLIBRI - KIDDY是一个全面但经济的工具,在内容和项目上与其他适合不同年龄的QOLIBRI版本相当。其应用有可能从主观角度提供从儿童期到老年期TBI患者的纵向数据,这有助于改善幼儿的治疗、康复和日常生活。