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Cutoff Values of MASK-air Patient-Reported Outcome Measures.

Authors :
Sousa-Pinto B
Sá-Sousa A
Vieira RJ
Amaral R
Pereira AM
Anto JM
Klimek L
Czarlewski W
Mullol J
Pfaar O
Bedbrook A
Brussino L
Kvedariene V
Larenas-Linnemann DE
Okamoto Y
Ventura MT
Ansotegui IJ
Bosnic-Anticevich S
Canonica GW
Cardona V
Cecchi L
Chivato T
Cingi C
Costa EM
Cruz AA
Del Giacco S
Devillier P
Fokkens WJ
Gemicioglu B
Haahtela T
Ivancevich JC
Kuna P
Kaidashev I
Kraxner H
Laune D
Louis R
Makris M
Monti R
Morais-Almeida M
Mösges R
Niedoszytko M
Papadopoulos NG
Patella V
Pham-Thi N
Regateiro FS
Reitsma S
Rouadi PW
Samolinski B
Sheikh A
Sova M
Taborda-Barata L
Toppila-Salmi S
Sastre J
Tsiligianni I
Valiulis A
Yorgancioglu A
Zidarn M
Zuberbier T
Fonseca JA
Bousquet J
Source :
The journal of allergy and clinical immunology. In practice [J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract] 2023 Apr; Vol. 11 (4), pp. 1281-1289.e5. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Dec 22.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: In clinical and epidemiological studies, cutoffs of patient-reported outcome measures can be used to classify patients into groups of statistical and clinical relevance. However, visual analog scale (VAS) cutoffs in MASK-air have not been tested.<br />Objective: To calculate cutoffs for VAS global, nasal, ocular, and asthma symptoms.<br />Methods: In a cross-sectional study design of all MASK-air participants, we compared (1) approaches based on the percentiles (tertiles or quartiles) of VAS distributions and (2) data-driven approaches based on clusters of data from 2 comparators (VAS work and VAS sleep). We then performed sensitivity analyses for individual countries and for VAS levels corresponding to full allergy control. Finally, we tested the different approaches using MASK-air real-world cross-sectional and longitudinal data to assess the most relevant cutoffs.<br />Results: We assessed 395,223 days from 23,201 MASK-air users with self-reported allergic rhinitis. The percentile-oriented approach resulted in lower cutoff values than the data-driven approach. We obtained consistent results in the data-driven approach. Following the latter, the proposed cutoff differentiating "controlled" and "partly-controlled" patients was similar to the cutoff value that had been arbitrarily used (20/100). However, a lower cutoff was obtained to differentiate between "partly-controlled" and "uncontrolled" patients (35 vs the arbitrarily-used value of 50/100).<br />Conclusions: Using a data-driven approach, we were able to define cutoff values for MASK-air VASs on allergy and asthma symptoms. This may allow for a better classification of patients with rhinitis and asthma according to different levels of control, supporting improved disease management.<br /> (Copyright © 2022 American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2213-2201
Volume :
11
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The journal of allergy and clinical immunology. In practice
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36566778
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaip.2022.12.005