Abstract

We describe here the development and validation of the Osteoarthritis Symptom Inventory Scale (OASIS), a new self-administered questionnaire specifically designed to evaluate the various osteoarthritis (OA) pain symptoms with different dimensions related to OA pain mechanisms. The initial development phase and qualitative study generated a list of 17 descriptors reflecting OA pain and other associated symptoms, leading to the first version of the questionnaire (OASIS17). Each item was quantified on a 0-10 numerical scale. Validation was performed using 123 consecutive patients with OA pain recruited at 28 centers in France, mainly general practitioner offices. Validation involved: (i) determining the questionnaire's factorial structure through exploratory and confirmatory analyses, (ii) analyzing convergent and divergent validities (i.e., construct validity), (iii) assessing each item's test-retest reliability, and (iv) evaluating OASIS's ability to detect treatment effects (i.e., sensitivity to change). The final OASIS version includes nine items discriminating and quantifying three distinct, clinically relevant OA pain dimensions sensitive to treatment. OASIS9's psychometric properties suggest that it could improve the characterization of OA pain profiles for three clinically relevant domains: localized, neuropathic-like, and deep pain. The OASIS9 questionnaire could be used to phenotype OA pain patients and identify responders to various therapeutic interventions as a function of OA pain dimensions.

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