Abstract

BackgroundAlthough item response theory (IRT) appears to be increasingly used within health care research in general, a comprehensive overview of the frequency and characteristics of IRT analyses within the rheumatic field is lacking. An overview of the use and application of IRT in rheumatology to date may give insight into future research directions and highlight new possibilities for the improvement of outcome assessment in rheumatic conditions. Therefore, this study systematically reviewed the application of IRT to patient-reported and clinical outcome measures in rheumatology.MethodsLiterature searches in PubMed, Scopus and Web of Science resulted in 99 original English-language articles which used some form of IRT-based analysis of patient-reported or clinical outcome data in patients with a rheumatic condition. Both general study information and IRT-specific information were assessed.ResultsMost studies used Rasch modeling for developing or evaluating new or existing patient-reported outcomes in rheumatoid arthritis or osteoarthritis patients. Outcomes of principle interest were physical functioning and quality of life. Since the last decade, IRT has also been applied to clinical measures more frequently. IRT was mostly used for evaluating model fit, unidimensionality and differential item functioning, the distribution of items and persons along the underlying scale, and reliability. Less frequently used IRT applications were the evaluation of local independence, the threshold ordering of items, and the measurement precision along the scale.ConclusionIRT applications have markedly increased within rheumatology over the past decades. To date, IRT has primarily been applied to patient-reported outcomes, however, applications to clinical measures are gaining interest. Useful IRT applications not yet widely used within rheumatology include the cross-calibration of instrument scores and the development of computerized adaptive tests which may reduce the measurement burden for both the patient and the clinician. Also, the measurement precision of outcome measures along the scale was only evaluated occasionally. Performed IRT analyses should be adequately explained, justified, and reported. A global consensus about uniform guidelines should be reached concerning the minimum number of assumptions which should be met and best ways of testing these assumptions, in order to stimulate the quality appraisal of performed IRT analyses.

Highlights

  • Item response theory (IRT) appears to be increasingly used within health care research in general, a comprehensive overview of the frequency and characteristics of item response theory (IRT) analyses within the rheumatic field is lacking

  • It could be observed that an increasing number of studies perform longitudinal IRT analyses since the 21st century, as represented by a rise of Differential Item Functioning (DIF) testing over time

  • Even though most research focussed on person fit statistics (PRO), IRT appeared to be useful for application to Clinical Measure (CM)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Item response theory (IRT) appears to be increasingly used within health care research in general, a comprehensive overview of the frequency and characteristics of IRT analyses within the rheumatic field is lacking. An overview of the use and application of IRT in rheumatology to date may give insight into future research directions and highlight new possibilities for the improvement of outcome assessment in rheumatic conditions. This study systematically reviewed the application of IRT to patient-reported and clinical outcome measures in rheumatology. Since there is no gold standard for the assessment of disease severity and impact in most rheumatic conditions, it is common practice to administer multiple outcome measures to patients. The severity and impact of most rheumatic conditions was typically evaluated with clinical measures (CMs) [1,2] such as laboratory measures of inflammation like the erythrocyte sedimentation rate [3] and physician-based joint counts [4,5]. A wide variety of PROs are currently in use, varying from single item visual analogue scales (e.g. pain or general health) to multiple item scales like the health assessment questionnaire (HAQ) [6] which measures a patient’s functional status and the 36-item short form health survey (SF-36) which measures eight dimensions of health related quality of life [7]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
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