Harris Lasse K, Larsen Trine S, Terluin Berend, Lauridsen Henrik H, Troelsen Anders, Ingelsrud Lina H
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Copenhagen University Hospital Hvidovre, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Department of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Qual Life Res. 2025 May 16. doi: 10.1007/s11136-025-03987-y.
To explore content validity, construct validity, and reliability of anchor questions used to determine minimal important change (MIC), patient acceptable symptom state (PASS) and treatment failure (TF) in patients undergoing knee or hip arthroplasty.
A mixed-methods study from one public hospital. Evaluation of content validity involved applying thematic analysis to data from think-aloud interviews. To ascertain construct validity and reliability, we focused on patients who underwent surgery between 2016 and 2022 and had responded to preoperative and either 3-, 12- or 24-month postoperative questionnaires. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was employed to assess present state bias (PSB), model fit, and reliability of the anchor questions.
We conducted 18 interviews with patients aged 52 to 84 (10 female). Based on seven emerging themes from the content validity analysis, MIC and PASS anchor questions were considered relevant and comprehensible, while the TF anchor question had several problems. Data from 1197 to 2207 patients, with 3-, 12-, or 24-month postoperative responses, were used to evaluate construct validity. The median age was 69-70 years (56-59% female). PSB for MIC was between 54 and 73%, and reliability for the anchor questions was between 0.52 and 0.80 for all time points. The CFA models varied between good and poor fit.
The MIC and PASS anchor questions demonstrated a high degree of content validity, while it was questionable for TF. Construct validity was considered good to poor for PASS, but patients may consider their present state more than their preoperative state when responding to the MIC. Reliability was considered acceptable in both MIC and PASS.
探讨用于确定膝关节或髋关节置换术患者最小重要变化(MIC)、患者可接受症状状态(PASS)和治疗失败(TF)的锚定问题的内容效度、结构效度和信度。
一项来自一家公立医院的混合方法研究。内容效度评估包括对出声思考访谈数据进行主题分析。为确定结构效度和信度,我们聚焦于2016年至2022年期间接受手术且对术前及术后3个月、12个月或24个月问卷作出回应的患者。采用验证性因子分析(CFA)来评估锚定问题的当前状态偏差(PSB)、模型拟合度和信度。
我们对年龄在52至84岁之间的患者进行了18次访谈(10名女性)。基于内容效度分析中出现的七个主题,MIC和PASS锚定问题被认为相关且易于理解,而TF锚定问题存在若干问题。使用1197至2207名患者术后3个月、12个月或24个月的回应数据来评估结构效度。中位年龄为69 - 70岁(56 - 59%为女性)。MIC的PSB在54%至73%之间,所有时间点的锚定问题信度在0.52至0.80之间。CFA模型的拟合度有好有差。
MIC和PASS锚定问题显示出高度的内容效度,而TF的效度存疑。PASS的结构效度被认为从良好到较差,但是患者在回答MIC时可能更多地考虑其当前状态而非术前状态。MIC和PASS的信度均被认为可接受。