Zidan Ahlam, Snider Laurie, Sions Jaclyn, Donlevie Kristen, Cirillo Alexa, Pacey Verity, Dahan-Oliel Noémi
School of Physical and Occupational Therapy, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Department of Clinical Research, Shriners Hospitals for Children, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Front Rehabil Sci. 2025 Aug 4;6:1576267. doi: 10.3389/fresc.2025.1576267. eCollection 2025.
Lower-extremity impairment is prevalent in children with Arthrogryposis multiplex congenita (AMC), frequently leading to mobility limitations. Without AMC-specific assessment tools, clinicians and researchers often employ tools that have not been formally validated for the AMC population. This study aims to establish the content validity of commonly used mobility measures in children with AMC following the COnsensus-based Standards for health Measurement INstruments (COSMIN) and the International Classification of Functioning, Disability, and Health (ICF) framework.
Items from the measures "Functional Mobility Scale (FMS), Gillette Functional Assessment Questionnaire (FAQ), Functional Independence Measure for Children (WeeFIM), and Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS)" were linked to the ICF categories using the refined linking rules of the ICF. Three raters conducted independent linking, and inter-rater reliability was calculated using the Kappa coefficient. An expert panel consisting of people with lived experience, clinicians and researchers reviewed the ICF codes identified by the raters and evaluated the comprehensibility, relevance, and comprehensiveness of the four measures using the COSMIN standards. The Content Validity Index (CVI) and modified Kappa (*) were calculated.
Inter-rater agreement was substantial [ = 0.79, (95% CI: 0.78-0.84)]. Most concepts (84.4%) were linked to the "Activities and Participation" domain, with a limited representation of "Environmental Factors" (8.9%) and "Body Functions" (6.7%). The CVI and * values for most measures indicated excellent content validity (0.91 to 1), except for the PROMIS Mobility Young Adult (≤0.82). The expert panel found that measures exhibited high comprehensibility and relevance, but comprehensiveness was insufficient. Most studied mobility measures missed concepts such as pain, fatigue, mobility aids, and compensatory strategies.
FMS, FAQ, WeeFIM, and PROMIS (Parent Proxy/Pediatric) demonstrated good content validity. However, none of these measures fully address the full spectrum of mobility experiences in children with AMC. Incorporating missing concepts, such as environmental challenges, compensatory strategies, and pain, into existing or newly developed assessment tools is essential for providing a more holistic evaluation of functional mobility. Doing so will support more comprehensive clinical assessment, improve outcome tracking, and enhance care for children living with AMC.
先天性多发性关节挛缩症(AMC)患儿下肢功能障碍很常见,常导致行动受限。由于缺乏针对AMC的评估工具,临床医生和研究人员常常使用未经AMC人群正式验证的工具。本研究旨在依据基于共识的健康测量工具标准(COSMIN)和国际功能、残疾与健康分类(ICF)框架,确定AMC患儿常用行动能力测量工具的内容效度。
使用ICF的细化链接规则,将“功能行动量表(FMS)、吉列功能评估问卷(FAQ)、儿童功能独立性测量(WeeFIM)和患者报告结局测量信息系统(PROMIS)”等测量工具中的条目与ICF类别进行链接。三名评分者进行独立链接,并使用Kappa系数计算评分者间信度。一个由有实际生活经验者、临床医生和研究人员组成的专家小组审查了评分者确定的ICF编码,并使用COSMIN标准评估这四项测量工具的可理解性、相关性和全面性。计算内容效度指数(CVI)和修正Kappa(*)。
评分者间一致性较高[κ = 0.79,(95%置信区间:0.78 - 0.84)]。大多数概念(84.4%)与“活动与参与”领域相关,“环境因素”(8.9%)和“身体功能”(6.7%)的体现有限。除了PROMIS青年成人行动能力量表(≤0.82)外,大多数测量工具的CVI和*值表明其内容效度极佳(0.91至1)。专家小组发现,这些测量工具具有较高的可理解性和相关性,但全面性不足。大多数研究的行动能力测量工具遗漏了疼痛、疲劳、行动辅助器具和代偿策略等概念。
FMS、FAQ、WeeFIM和PROMIS(家长代理/儿童版)显示出良好的内容效度。然而,这些测量工具均未全面涵盖AMC患儿的所有行动体验。将环境挑战、代偿策略和疼痛等遗漏概念纳入现有或新开发的评估工具,对于更全面地评估功能行动能力至关重要。这样做将有助于更全面的临床评估、改善结局跟踪,并加强对AMC患儿的护理。