Abstract

BackgroundAlthough evidence based treatment approaches for acute low back pain are available, the prevention of persistent disabling symptoms remains a challenge. Subgroup targeted treatment using adequate screening tools may be a key component for the development of new treatment concepts and is demonstrating promising early evidence. The Keele STarT Back Screening Tool is a practical instrument, developed to stratify patients with back pain according to their risk of persistent disabling symptoms. The aim of this study was to translate and cross-culturally adapt the STarT tool into German (STarT-G) and to investigate its psychometric properties.MethodsThe translation was performed according to internationally accepted guidelines and pretested to assess face validity among patients. Psychometric testing was then performed within a cross-sectional cohort of adult patients attending physiotherapy practices for back pain. Patients completed a booklet containing STarT-G and 5 reference standard questionnaires. Measurement properties of the STarT-G were explored including construct validity, floor and ceiling effects, and discriminative abilities.ResultsThe pretests (n=25) showed good face validity including strong comprehension and acceptability of the STarT-G with only item 5 (fear avoidance) manifesting some ambiguities. The questionnaires were sent to 74 and completed by 50 patients (68%) of whom mean age was 46 (SD 14.5) years and 52% were male. Spearman’s rank correlations for construct validity ranged from 0.35 to 0.56. AUCs for discriminative ability ranged from 0.79 to 0.91. Neither floor nor ceiling effects were observed. There were 28 (57%) participants defined as low risk, 17 (35%) as medium risk, and 4 (8%) as high risk.ConclusionSTarT-G is linguistically valid for German speaking countries. For the selected population, the correlations indicate acceptable validity and AUC showed satisfying discrimination. Data for psychometric properties have to be confirmed in a large scale study with a representative sample.

Highlights

  • Low back pain (LBP) has a high prevalence and incidence in Switzerland [1] and Germany [2] with estimates suggesting a 4 week prevalence of 43% among the Swiss population in 2007 [3]

  • Evidence based treatment approaches for acute low back pain are available, the prevention of persistent disabling symptoms remains a challenge

  • Subgroup targeted treatment using adequate screening tools may be a key component for the development of new treatment concepts and is demonstrating promising early evidence

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Summary

Introduction

Low back pain (LBP) has a high prevalence and incidence in Switzerland [1] and Germany [2] with estimates suggesting a 4 week prevalence of 43% among the Swiss population in 2007 [3]. The term ‘low back pain’ covers a broad set of symptoms and behaviors rather than a single clinical condition. This inherently means that patients with LBP are a heterogeneous group requiring different management approaches despite a range of effective treatments being available [7] [8]. Evidence based treatment approaches for acute low back pain are available, the prevention of persistent disabling symptoms remains a challenge. The Keele STarT Back Screening Tool is a practical instrument, developed to stratify patients with back pain according to their risk of persistent disabling symptoms. The aim of this study was to translate and cross-culturally adapt the STarT tool into German (STarT-G) and to investigate its psychometric properties.

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