Abstract

It is important that questionnaires are as short as possible while still capturing the scope of problems relevant in an effective and reliable manner, to minimize the response burden. The purpose of our study was to develop a shortened version of the EORTC QLQ-BR23 for using in breast cancer survivors. Our data come from 10794 breast cancer survivors who completed the EORTC QLQ-BR23. Two-thirds of the sample was randomly selected from the original sample for development, and the remaining was used for validation. Item response theory methods were applied to shorten scales. The graded response model of Samejima was used to fit the item responses. The shortened scale was evaluated with the validation set by examining the mean difference, the proportion of respondents correctly predicted, correlation and weighted kappa between the shortened form and the original observed scores. Results reveal that a three-item BRBI, a four-item BRST, a three-item BRBS and a two-item BRAS forecast the scores on the original scales with wonderful consistency and are alike in measurement precision with no loss or only little loss in detecting group differences. Prospective validation on new diagnosed breast cancer patients and with poor QOL is needed.

Highlights

  • The development of item response theory (IRT) has reached a point where testing applications[1,2], whether in educational[3,4,5] or psychological[6,7,8,9] testing programs or in research, can be performed entirely with IRT methods

  • The example data come from 10794 breast cancer survivors from a cross-sectional study conducted in 2013, who were the member of the affiliated groups of Cancer Recovery Clubs in 34 cities across China

  • The results show that the scales are sufficiently unidimensional for application of unidimensional IRT analysis

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The development of item response theory (IRT) has reached a point where testing applications[1,2], whether in educational[3,4,5] or psychological[6,7,8,9] testing programs or in research, can be performed entirely with IRT methods. IRT methods have obvious advantages compared with classical test theory[2,15,16]. The goal of this study was to evaluate the possibilities for shortening the EORTC QLQ-BR23 (body image, systemic therapy side effects, breast symptoms, arm symptoms) scales for using in breast cancer survivors while still be able to compare the results of the shortened scales with the non-shortened scales firsthand

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

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