Abstract

The Juvenile Arthritis Multidimensional Assessment Report (JAMAR) is a new parent/patient reported outcome measure that enables a thorough assessment of the disease status in children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). We report the results of the cross-cultural adaptation and validation of the parent and patient versions of the JAMAR in the Swiss French language. The reading comprehension of the questionnaire was tested in ten JIA parents and patients. Each participating centre was asked to collect demographic, clinical data, and the JAMAR in 100 consecutive JIA patients or all consecutive patients seen in a 6-month period and to administer the JAMAR to 100 healthy children and their parents. The statistical validation phase explored descriptive statistics and the psychometric issues of the JAMAR: the three Likert assumptions, floor/ceiling effects, internal consistency, Cronbach’s alpha, interscale correlations, test–retest reliability, and construct validity (convergent and discriminant validity). A total of 98 JIA patients (3.1% systemic, 43.9% oligoarticular, 16.3% RF negative polyarthritis, 36.7% other categories), and 64 healthy children were enrolled in a paediatric rheumatology centre. The JAMAR components discriminated well healthy subjects from JIA patients. All JAMAR components revealed good psychometric performances. In conclusion, the Swiss French version of the JAMAR is a valid tool for the assessment of children with JIA and is suitable for use both in routine clinical practice and clinical research.

Highlights

  • The aim of the present study was to cross-culturally adapt and validate the Swiss French parent, child/adult version of the Juvenile Arthritis Multidimensional Assessment Report (JAMAR) [1] in patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritisThe local members of the Paediatric Rheumatology International TrialsOrganisation (PRINTO) participating in the project are listed in the dedicated tables no. 2 and 3 of “https://doi.org/10.1007/ s0029​6-018-3944-1 / Cross-cultural adaptation and psychometric evaluation of the Juvenile Arthritis Multidimensional Assessment Report (JAMAR) in 54 languages across 52 countries: review of the general methodology”.Extended author information available on the last page of the article (JIA)

  • The Swiss French JAMAR was fully cross-culturally adapted from the standard English version with three forward and two backward translations with a concordance for 121/123 (98.4%) translations lines for the parent version and 118/120 (98.3%) lines for the child version

  • The parent and child versions of the Swiss French JAMAR were unmodified after the probe technique

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Summary

Introduction

The aim of the present study was to cross-culturally adapt and validate the Swiss French parent, child/adult version of the Juvenile Arthritis Multidimensional Assessment Report (JAMAR) [1] in patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritisThe local members of the Paediatric Rheumatology International TrialsOrganisation (PRINTO) participating in the project are listed in the dedicated tables no. 2 and 3 of “https://doi.org/10.1007/ s0029​6-018-3944-1 / Cross-cultural adaptation and psychometric evaluation of the Juvenile Arthritis Multidimensional Assessment Report (JAMAR) in 54 languages across 52 countries: review of the general methodology”.Extended author information available on the last page of the article (JIA). The JAMAR assesses the most relevant parent/patient reported outcomes in JIA, including overall well-being, functional status, health-related quality of life (HRQoL), pain, morning stiffness, disease activity/status/course, articular and extra-articular involvement, drug-related side effects/compliance, and satisfaction with illness outcome. This project was part of a larger multinational study conducted by the Paediatric Rheumatology International Trials Organisation (PRINTO) [2] aimed to evaluate the epidemiology, outcome, and treatment of childhood arthritis (EPOCA) in different geographic areas [3]. The Swiss German version of the JAMAR is currently under development

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