Abstract
The wearing-off (WO) phenomenon is the most common motor complication in advanced Parkinson's disease (PD), but its identification remains challenging. The 9- and 19-item Wearing-off Questionnaires (WOQ-9 and WOQ-19) are self-assessment tools for motor and nonmotor symptoms that are widely used for WO screening. We produced Korean versions of the WOQ-19 and WOQ-9 (K-WOQ-19 and K-WOQ-9) and investigated their validity and reliability. We used the translation-back translation method to produce K-WOQ-19 and K-WOQ-9, which were self-administered by 124 patients with PD. We conducted in-depth 10-minute interviews for confirming the presence of the WO phenomenon, and then stratified the participants into groups with and without WO. Diagnostic accuracy was assessed byanalyzing receiver operating characteristic curves. Concurrent validity was assessed using the Movement Disorder Society-Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS) andthe Hoehn and Yahr stage with Spearman's rank correlation analysis. Reliability was assessedbased on test-retest Cohen's kappa (κ) values and intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs). The optimal cutoff scores on the K-WOQ-19 and K-WOQ-9 for WO screening were 4 and 2, respectively. The test-retest ICCs of K-WOQ-19 and K-WOQ-9 were 0.943 and 0.938, respectively. Nineteen of the combined 20 items in K-WOQ-19 and K-WOQ-9 showed moderate-to-substantial agreement (κ=0.412-0.771, p<0.001). The scores on the translated scales were significantly correlated with MDS-UPDRS IV scores. K-WOQ-19 and K-WOQ-9 are reliable and valid tools for detecting WO, with optimal cutoff scores of 4 and 2, respectively.
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