Abstract

To describe the scoring approach, considering interpretability, validity, and use, of a new patient-centered patient reported outcome (PRO), the Urinary Symptom Questionnaire for Neurogenic Bladder-Intermittent Catheter version (USQNB-IC). Subject matter experts (researchers, clinicians, a consumer, a psychometrician) classified USQNB-IC items. Profiles were then composed based on self-management decisions made by patients; patient management decisions made by clinicians; and research-oriented decisions made by investigators. Participants in an 18-month pilot study completed the USQNB-IC every week. Differences in decisions based on traditional 'total scores' and profiles were examined. Validity was defined based on alignment of scoring method with decisions. A new set of patient-centered PROs enable monitoring and decision-making around urinary signs and symptoms among people with neurogenic bladder (NB). Classifications of USQNB-IC items by subject matter experts. Utility of the classifications and profiles that were created was assessed using weekly responses from the 6-month baseline period from 103 participants in a pilot study. Not applicable. Classification of the 29 symptoms resulted in four categories with exchangeability within-category and nonexchangeability across categories. The burden of each symptom type is one approach to scoring the USQNB-IC. Five profiles, based on these categories, emerged based on, and supportive of, decisions to be made according to symptoms, representing a categorical approach to scoring the USQNB-IC. USQNB-IC items are not all exchangeable. Four symptom classifications comprise within-class exchangeable items. Five profiles emerged to summarize these items to promote decision-making and identification of change over time. Both ways to "score" the USQNB-IC are described and discussed. "Profiling" promotes valid and interpretable decisions by patients and clinicians, based on a patient's urinary symptoms with the USQNB-IC cross-sectionally and longitudinally. Alternatively, four subsets of the 29 USQNB-IC symptoms can be used as continuous outcomes representing "burden" in clinical management or research.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call