Rasch validation of the short form (8 item) PC-QoL questionnaire and applicability of use as a health state classification system for a new preference-based measure

, , , , , , & (2024) Rasch validation of the short form (8 item) PC-QoL questionnaire and applicability of use as a health state classification system for a new preference-based measure. Quality of Life Research, 33(7), pp. 1893-1903.

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Description

Background: The parent-proxy paediatric chronic cough quality of life questionnaire (PC-QoL) is a commonly used measure of spillover quality of life in parents of children with chronic cough. To date, spillover health utility in these parents is not routinely estimated largely due to the lack of a suitable instrument. Their perspective is not included in economic evaluations of interventions for their children. We explored developing a health state classification system based on the PC-QoL for measuring health utility spill over in this population. 

Methods: This study included PC-QoL 8-item responses of 653 parents participating in a prospective cohort study about paediatric chronic cough. Exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and Rasch analysis were used to examine dimensionality and select potential items and level structure. Results: EFA indicated that the PC-QoL had one underlying domain. Rasch analysis indicated threshold disordering in all items which improved when items were collapsed from seven to four levels. Two demonstrated differential item functioning (DIF) by diagnosis or ethnicity and were excluded from the final scale. This scale satisfied Rasch assumptions of local independence and unidimensionality and demonstrated acceptable fit to the Rasch model. It was presented to and modified by an expert panel and a consumer panel. The resulting classification system had six items, each with four levels. 

Discussion: The PC-QoL can conform to a Rasch model with minor modifications. It may be a good basis for the classification system of a child cough-specific PBM. A valuation study is required to estimate preference weights for each item and to estimate health utility in parents of children with chronic cough.

Impact and interest:

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ID Code: 250406
Item Type: Contribution to Journal (Journal Article)
Refereed: Yes
ORCID iD:
Roberts, Jack M.orcid.org/0000-0003-3519-4725
McPhail, Steven M.orcid.org/0000-0002-1463-662X
Kularatna, Sanjeewaorcid.org/0000-0001-5650-154X
Measurements or Duration: 11 pages
Keywords: Chronic cough, Health utility, Paediatrics, Patient-reported outcomes, Quality of life, Quality-adjusted life years
DOI: 10.1007/s11136-024-03652-w
ISSN: 0962-9343
Pure ID: 172476032
Divisions: Current > Research Centres > Centre for Healthcare Transformation
Current > Research Centres > Australian Centre for Health Services Innovation
Current > QUT Faculties and Divisions > Faculty of Health
Current > Schools > School of Public Health & Social Work
Funding Information: Open Access funding enabled and organized by CAUL and its Member Institutions. ABC is supported by a National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Practitioner fellowship (Number 1154302). ABC has received unrelated grants from the NHMRC and other fees to the institution from work relating to being an IDMC member of an unlicensed vaccine/molecules (GSK), Moderna and Astra-Zeneca an advisory member of study design for other unlicensed potential therapeutic drugs (Zambon and BI). JMM was supported Lung Foundation Australia Hope Research Fund Andrew Harrison Fellowship in Bronchiectasis Research and is supported by the NHMRC Centre for Research Excellence for bronchiectasis. JMR is supported by a scholarship from the NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence for bronchiectasis in children (APP1170958) and an Australian Government Research Training Programme Scholarship. VG is supported by Queensland advancing research fellowship and Royal Australasian College of physician’s research establishment fellowship (2022REF00054).
Funding:
Copyright Owner: 2024 The Author(s)
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Deposited On: 03 Jul 2024 05:05
Last Modified: 03 Jul 2024 23:57