Abstract

ObjectivesQuestionnaires are essential for measuring tinnitus severity and intervention-related change but there is no standard instrument used routinely in research settings. Most tinnitus questionnaires are optimised for measuring severity but not change. However, the Tinnitus Functional Index (TFI) claims to be optimised for both. It has not however been fully validated for research purposes. Here we evaluate the relevant psychometric properties of the TFI, specifically the questionnaire factor structure, reproducibility, validity and responsiveness guided by quality criteria for the measurement properties of health-related questionnaires. MethodsThe study involved a retrospective analysis of data collected for 294 members of the general public who participated in a randomised controlled trial of a novel tinnitus device (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01541969). Participants completed up to eight commonly used assessment questionnaires including the TFI, Tinnitus Handicap Inventory (THI), Tinnitus Handicap Questionnaire (THQ), a Visual Analogue Scale of loudness (VAS-Loudness), Percentage Annoyance question, the Beck's Depression Inventory (BDI), Beck's Anxiety Inventory (BAI), and the World Health Organisation Quality of Life-Bref (WHOQOL-BREF). A series of analyses assessed the study objectives. Forty four participants completed the TFI at a second visit (within 7–21 days and before receiving any intervention) providing data for reproducibility assessments. ResultsThe 8-factor structure was not fully confirmed for this general (non-clinical) population. Whilst it was acceptable standalone subscale, the ‘auditory’ factor showed poor loading with the higher order factor ‘functional impact of tinnitus’. Reproducibility assessments for the overall TFI indicate high internal consistency (α = 0.80) and extremely high reliability (ICC: 0.91), whilst agreement was borderline acceptable (93%). Construct validity was demonstrated by high correlations between scores on the TFI and THI (r = 0.82) and THQ (r = 0.82), moderate correlations with VAS-L (r = 0.46), PR-A (r = 0.58), BDI (r = 0.57), BAI (r = 0.39) and WHOQOL (r = −0.48). Floor effects were observed for more than 50% of the items. A smallest detectable change score of 22.4 is proposed for the TFI global score. ConclusionEven though the proposed 8-factor structure was not fully confirmed for this population, the TFI appears to cover multiple symptom domains, and to measure the construct of tinnitus with an excellent reliability in distinguishing between patients. While the TFI may discriminate those whose tinnitus is not a problem, floor effects in many items means it is less appropriate as a measure of change in this subgroup. Further investigation is needed to determine whether these effects are relevant in other populations.

Highlights

  • The Cognitive subscale showed a moderate association with the BDI-II, perhaps indicating some sensitivity to aspects of cognitive difficulty associated with generalised depression. These results suggest an acceptable degree of discriminant validity

  • The psychometric evaluation performed here provides the first account of how reliably the TFI measures tinnitus severity and how well it distinguishes between individual differences in tinnitus-related distress in a research population

  • The global TFI is a composite measure of the functional impact of tinnitus

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Summary

Introduction

Quantifying the severity of this impact, or how this severity changes as a result of time or intervention, is difficult. Psychoacoustic estimates of tinnitus loudness may partially explain some of the variance attributed to the functional impact or perceived annoyance/intrusiveness of tinnitus (Dauman and Tyler, 1992; Andersson, 2003). Annoyance or awareness of tinnitus made using a Visual Analogue Scale (VAS), recommended by some as standalone measures of tinnitus severity, do not correlate strongly with either psychoacoustic or multi-item questionnaire measures of tinnitus (Adamchic et al, 2012). Given that tinnitus is a multi-dimensional symptom, researchers typically rely on multi-attribute self-report questionnaires to quantify tinnitus severity and to assess intervention-related change over time

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