论文已发表
注册即可获取德孚的最新动态
IF 收录期刊
Authors Delgado-Herrera L, Banderas B, Ojo O, Kothari R, Zeiher B
Received 4 November 2016
Accepted for publication 15 March 2017
Published 18 July 2017 Volume 2017:8 Pages 83—95
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/PROM.S126605
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single-blind
Peer reviewers approved by Dr Colin Mak
Peer reviewer comments 2
Editor who approved publication: Professor Liana Castel
Background: Subjects with diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome (IBS-D)
experience abdominal cramping, bloating, pressure, and pain. Due to an absence
of clinical biomarkers for IBS-D severity, evaluation of clinical therapy
benefits depends on valid and reliable symptom assessments. A patient-reported
outcome (PRO) instrument has been developed, comprising of two questionnaires –
the IBS-D Daily Symptom Diary and IBS-D Symptom Event Log – suitable for
clinical trials and real-world settings. This program aimed to support
instrument conversion from pen-and-paper to electronic format.
Materials and methods: Digital technology (Android/iOS) and a
traditional mode of administration study in the target population were used to
migrate or convert the validated PRO IBS-D pen-and-paper measure to an
electronic format. Equivalence interviews, conducted in three waves, each had
three parts: 1) conceptual equivalence testing between formats, 2)
electronic-version report-history cognitive debriefing, and 3) electronic
version usability evaluation. After each interview wave, preliminary analyses
were conducted and modifications made to the electronic version, before the
next wave. Final revisions were based on a full analysis of equivalence
interviews. The final analysis evaluated subjects’ ability to read, understand,
and provide meaningful responses to the instruments across both formats.
Responses were classified according to conceptual equivalence between formats
and mobile-format usability assessed with a questionnaire and open-ended
probes.
Results: Equivalence interviews (n=25) demonstrated
conceptual equivalence between formats. Mobile-application cognitive debriefing
showed some subjects experienced difficulty with font/screen visibility and
understanding or reading some report-history charts and summary screens. To
address difficulties, minor revisions/modifications were made and landscape
orientation and zoom-in/zoom-out features incorporated.
Conclusion: This study indicates that the two administration modes
are conceptually equivalent. Since both formats are conceptually equivalent,
both are psychometrically reliable, as established in the pen-and-paper
version. Subjects found both mobile applications (Android/iOS) offered many
advantages over the paper version, such as real-time assessment of their
experience.
Keywords: irritable bowel
syndrome diarrhea-predominant, IBS-D, symptoms, mobile application,
patient-reported outcomes, conceptual equivalence
摘要视频链接:IBS-D
PRO mode-of-administration equivalence