4 results on '"Cornblath, David"'
Search Results
2. Rasch-built Overall Disability Scale for Multifocal motor neuropathy (MMN-RODS(C))
- Author
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Vanhoutte, Els K., Faber, Catharina G., van Nes, Sonja I., Cats, Elisabeth A., van der Pol, W.-Ludo, Gorson, Kenneth C., van Doorn, Pieter A., Cornblath, David R., van den Berg, Leonard H., Merkies, Ingemar S. J., Neurology, Immunology, ANS - Amsterdam Neuroscience, AII - Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity, and 05 Neurology and psychiatry
- Subjects
behavioral disciplines and activities ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
Clinical trials in multifocal motor neuropathy (MMN) have often used ordinal-based measures that may not accurately capture changes. We aimed to construct a disability interval outcome measure specifically for MMN using the Rasch model and to examine its clinimetric properties. A total of 146 preliminary activity and participation items were assessed twice (reliability studies) in 96 clinically stable MMN patients. These patients also assessed the ordinal-based overall disability sum score (construct, sample-dependent validity). The final Rasch-built overall disability scale for MMN (MMN-RODS(C)) was serially applied in 26 patients with newly diagnosed or relapsing MMN, treated with intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) (1-year follow-up; responsiveness study). The magnitude of change for each patient was calculated using the minimum clinically important difference technique related to the individually obtained standard errors. A total of 121 items not fulfilling Rasch requirements were removed. The final 25-item MMN-RODS(C) fulfilled all Rasch model's expectations and showed acceptable reliability and validity including good discriminatory capacity. Most serially examined patients improved, but its magnitude was low, reflecting poor responsiveness. The constructed MMN-RODS(C) is a disease-specific, interval measure to detect activity limitations in patients with MMN and overcomes the shortcomings of ordinal scales. However, future clinimetric studies are needed to improve the MMN-RODS(C)'s responsiveness by longer observations and/or more rigorous treatment regimens.
- Published
- 2015
3. Comparing the NIS vs. MRC and INCAT sensory scale through Rasch analyses
- Author
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Draak, Thomas H. P., Vanhoutte, Els K., van Nes, Sonja I., Gorson, Kenneth C., van der Pol, W.-Ludo, Notermans, Nicolette C., Nobile-Orazio, Eduardo, Lewis, Richard A., Léger, Jean-Marc, van den Bergh, Peter Y. K., Lauria, Giuseppe, Bril, Vera, Katzberg, Hans, Lunn, Michael P. T., Pouget, Jean, van der Kooi, Anneke J., Hahn, Angelika F., van den Berg, Leonard H., van Doorn, Pieter A., Cornblath, David R., Faber, Catharina G., Merkies, Ingemar S. J., Neurology, ANS - Amsterdam Neuroscience, AII - Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity, and 05 Neurology and psychiatry
- Abstract
We performed a comparison between Neuropathy Impairment Scale-sensory (NISs) vs. the modified Inflammatory Neuropathy Cause and Treatment sensory scale (mISS), and NIS-motor vs. the Medical Research Council sum score in patients with Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS), chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP), and IgM monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance-related polyneuropathy (MGUSP). The ordinal data were subjected to Rasch analyses, creating Rasch-transformed (RT)-intervals for all measures. Comparison between measures was based on validity/reliability with an emphasis on responsiveness (using the patient's level of change related to the individually obtained varying SE for minimum clinically important difference). Eighty stable patients (GBS: 30, CIDP: 30, and MGUSP: 20) were assessed twice (entry: two observers; 2-4 weeks later: one observer), and 137 newly diagnosed or relapsing patients (GBS: 55, CIDP: 59, and IgM-MGUSP: 23) were serially examined with 12 months follow-up. Data modifications were needed to improve model fit for all measures. The sensory and motor scales demonstrated approximately equal and acceptable validity and reliability scores. Responsiveness scores were poor but slightly higher in RT-mISS compared to RT-NISs. Responsiveness was equal for the RT-motor scales, but higher in GBS compared to CIDP; responsiveness was poor in patients with MGUSP, suggesting a longer duration of follow-up in the latter group of patients
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- 2015
4. Impairment measures versus inflammatory RODS in GBS and CIDP: a responsiveness comparison
- Author
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Vanhoutte, Els K., Draak, Thomas H. P., Gorson, Kenneth C., van Nes, Sonja I., Hoeijmakers, Janneke G. J., Van der Pol, W. -Ludo, Notermans, Nicolette. C., Lewis, Richard A., Nobile-Orazio, Eduardo, Leger, Jean-Marc, Van den Bergh, Peter Y. K., Lauria, Giuseppe, Bril, Vera, Katzberg, Hans, Lunn, Michael P. T., Pouget, Jean, van der Kooi, Anneke J., Hahn, Angelika F., van Doorn, Pieter A., Cornblath, David R., van den Berg, Leonard H., Faber, Catharina G., Merkies, Ingemar S. J., Neurology, Amsterdam Neuroscience, Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity, 05 Neurology and psychiatry, RS: MHeNs - R1 - Cognitive Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience, Klinische Neurowetenschappen, and MUMC+: DA KG Polikliniek (9)
- Subjects
outcome measure ,immune-mediated neuropathies ,minimum clinically important difference ,humanities ,Rasch - Abstract
This study aimed to 'define responder' through the concept of minimum clinically important differences using the individually obtained standard errors (MCID-SE) and a heuristic 'external criterion' responsiveness method in patients with Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) and chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP). One hundred and fourteen newly diagnosed or relapsing patients (GBS: 55, CIDP: 59) were serially examined (1-year follow-up). The inflammatory Rasch-built overall disability scale (I-RODS), Rasch-transformed MRC sum score (RT-MRC), and Rasch-transformed modified-INCAT-sensory scale (RT-mISS) were assessed. Being-a-responder was defined as having a MCID-SE cut-off ≥1.96. Also, the correlations between patients' scores on each scale and the EuroQoL health-status 'thermometer' (external criterion) were determined (higher correlation indicated better responsiveness). In both diseases, the SEs showed a characteristic 'U'-shaped dynamic pattern across each scales' continuum. The number of patients showing a meaningful change were higher for the I-RODS > RT-MRC > RT-mISS and were in GBS higher than CIDP patients. The MCID-SE concept using Rasch-transformed data demonstrated an individual pattern of 'being-a-responder' in patients with immune-mediated neuropathies, and the findings were validated by the external criterion responsiveness method. The I-RODS showed greater responsiveness compared with the MRC and INCAT-sensory scales, and its use is therefore recommended in future trials in GBS and CIDP
- Published
- 2015
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