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Evaluation of the psychometric properties of the Early Morning Symptoms of COPD Instrument (EMSCI)

Authors :
Hareendran A
Make BJ
Zaiser E
Garcia Gil E
Source :
International Journal of COPD, Vol Volume 13, Pp 1633-1645 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Dove Medical Press, 2018.

Abstract

Asha Hareendran,1 Barry J Make,2 Erica Zaiser,1 Esther Garcia Gil3 1Patient Centered Research, Evidera, London, UK; 2Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, National Jewish Health, Denver, CO, USA; 3Global Medical Affairs, AstraZeneca, Barcelona, Spain Background: Early morning respiratory symptoms impact quality of life and are often the most troublesome for patients with COPD. Reduction in symptoms and their impact are important treatment outcomes for COPD. The Early Morning Symptoms of COPD Instrument (EMSCI) is a daily diary designed to collect patients’ report of the occurrence, severity, and impact of morning COPD symptoms.Methods: To assess the psychometric properties of the EMSCI, a split-half sample of data from a COPD clinical trial where participants completed the EMSCI daily was used for conducting descriptive statistics, factor analyses, and Rasch model analyses to examine item performance and inform scoring. Once the final scoring algorithm was determined, data from the second split-half sample were used to examine the properties of the EMSCI. Test–retest reliability was assessed using intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). Correlations with other study assessments were used to evaluate convergent and known-groups validity.Results: Data from 1,663 patients with COPD aged 40–93 years were analyzed. Factor analysis and Rasch analysis confirmed a one-factor structure for the 6 individual symptom items. Item analyses supported the generation of 4 scores. All scores demonstrated good test–retest reliability: 6-item symptom severity (ICC, 0.84); overall morning symptom severity (ICC, 0.84); activity limitation (ICC, 0.85); and rescue medication (ICC, 0.62). Significant correlations between EMSCI scores, St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire scores, and EXAcerbations of Chronic pulmonary disease Tool (EXACT)-Respiratory Symptoms scores supported the tool’s convergent validity. Significant differences (p

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
11782005
Volume :
ume 13
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
International Journal of COPD
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.06ba4cd811c458ea296d76296c86cbd
Document Type :
article