Initial Content Validation and Roadmap for a New Patient-Reported Outcome Measure of Pain Intensity

被引:2
|
作者
Langford, Dale J. [1 ,7 ]
Gewandter, Jennifer S. [2 ]
Amtmann, Dagmar [3 ]
Reeve, Bryce B. [4 ]
Corneli, Amy [4 ]
McKenna, Kevin [4 ]
Swezey, Teresa [5 ]
McFatrich, Molly [4 ]
Jensen, Mark P. [3 ]
Turk, Dennis C. [6 ]
Dworkin, Robert H. [2 ]
机构
[1] Hosp Special Surg, Dept Anesthesiol Crit Care & Pain Management, New York, NY USA
[2] Univ Rochester, Dept Anesthesiol & Perioperat Med, Rochester, NY USA
[3] Univ Washington, Dept Rehabil Med, Seattle, WA USA
[4] Duke Univ, Ctr Hlth Measurement, Dept Populat Hlth Sci, Durham, NC USA
[5] Duke Univ, Dept Populat Hlth Sci, Durham, NC USA
[6] Univ Washington, Dept Anesthesiol & Pain Med, Seattle, WA USA
[7] Hosp Special Surg, Dept Anesthesiol Crit Care & Pain Management, 535 70th St, New York, NY 10021 USA
来源
JOURNAL OF PAIN | 2022年 / 23卷 / 11期
关键词
Pain intensity measurement; clinical outcome assessment; content validation; acute pain; chronic pain; CONTENT VALIDITY; RATING-SCALES; PRO INSTRUMENTS; CLINICAL-TRIALS; COMPLEX; NUMBER;
D O I
10.1016/j.jpain.2022.07.001
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Measures of pain intensity (eg, numeric rating scales [NRS]) are widely used in clinical research and practice. While these measures have evidence for validity and reliability, poor standardi-zation of instructions, and response options limits precision of pain assessment, allows for inconsis-tency in interpretation, and presents a challenge for comparison and aggregation of study results. Despite these pitfalls, the 0 to 10 NRS remains the most commonly used primary outcome measure in clinical trials of pain treatments and is the core measure recommended by regulatory agencies. The purpose of this study was to describe the first phase in the development of a pain intensity measure that is easily interpretable, psychometrically sound, and that adheres to FDA qualification processes. The Analgesic, Anesthetic, and Addiction Clinical Trial, Translations, Innovations, Opportunities, and Networks (ACTTION) public-private partnership conducted concept elicitation interviews (N = 44; 22 with acute pain; 22 with chronic pain) to understand the patient perspective on rating pain intensity and to identify actionable suggestions for improved clarity and meaningfulness of instructions, recall periods, and response options. This article summarizes interview findings, describes how patient input and FDA feedback informed preliminary candidate measures, and provides an overview of the FDA qualification process. Perspective: Concept elicitation interviews informed the development of content-valid candidate measures of acute and chronic pain intensity for planned use in clinical trials of pain treatments, and comprise the initial stage in FDA clinical outcome assessment qualification. Measures will subse-quently be evaluated through cognitive interviews and a series of psychometric studies.
引用
收藏
页码:1945 / 1957
页数:13
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