Patient-reported outcomes are important for understanding recovery after burn injury, benchmarking service delivery and measuring the impact of interventions. PROMIS-29 domains have been validated for use among diverse populations though not among burn survivors. The purpose of this study was to examine validity and reliability of PROMIS-29 scores in this population.
PROMIS-29 scores of physical function, anxiety, depression, fatigue, sleep disturbance, ability to participate in social roles, and pain interference were evaluated for validity and reliability in adult burn survivors. Unidimensionality, floor and ceiling effects, internal consistency, and reliability were examined. Differential item functioning (DIF) was used to examine bias with respect to demographic and injury characteristics. Correlations with measures of related constructs (Community Integration Questionnaire, Satisfaction with Life Scale, Post-Traumatic Stress Checklist-Civilian, and Veteran’s Rand-12) and known-group differences were examined.
876 burn survivors with moderate to severe injury from 6 months-20 years post burn provided responses on PROMIS-29 domains. Participant ages ranged from 18-93 years at time of assessment; mean years since injury was 3.4. All PROMIS domain scores showed high internal consistency (Cronbach’s α = 0.87-0.97). There was a large ceiling effect on ability to participate in social roles (39.7%) and physical function (43.3%). One-factor confirmatory factor analyses supported unidimensionality (all CFI >0.95). We found no statistically significant bias (DIF). Reliability was high (>0.9) across trait levels for all domains except sleep, which reached moderate reliability (>0.85). All known-group differences by demographic and clinical characteristics were in the hypothesized direction and magnitude except burn size categories.
The results provide strong evidence for reliability and validity of PROMIS-29 domain scores among adult burn survivors. Reliability of the extreme scores could be increased and the ceiling effects reduced by administering PROMIS-43, which includes 6 items per domain, or by administering by computerized adaptive testing.
This is a Level III psychometric analysis of prospectively collected survey data.
Copyright © 2021 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.
About The Expert
Kara McMullen
Alyssa Bamer
Colleen M Ryan
Jeffrey C Schneider
Nicole Gibran
Barclay T Stewart
Tracy Mroz
Steven Wolf
Dagmar Amtmann
References
PubMed