Cargando…

The Development, Deployment, and Evaluation of the CLEFT-Q Computerized Adaptive Test: A Multimethods Approach Contributing to Personalized, Person-Centered Health Assessments in Plastic Surgery

BACKGROUND: Routine use of patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) and computerized adaptive tests (CATs) may improve care in a range of surgical conditions. However, most available CATs are neither condition-specific nor coproduced with patients and lack clinically relevant score interpretation....

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Harrison, Conrad, Apon, Inge, Ardouin, Kenny, Sidey-Gibbons, Chris, Klassen, Anne, Cano, Stefan, Wong Riff, Karen, Pusic, Andrea, Versnel, Sarah, Koudstaal, Maarten, Allori, Alexander C, Rogers-Vizena, Carolyn, Swan, Marc C, Furniss, Dominic, Rodrigues, Jeremy
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10185334/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37104031
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/41870
_version_ 1785042333537927168
author Harrison, Conrad
Apon, Inge
Ardouin, Kenny
Sidey-Gibbons, Chris
Klassen, Anne
Cano, Stefan
Wong Riff, Karen
Pusic, Andrea
Versnel, Sarah
Koudstaal, Maarten
Allori, Alexander C
Rogers-Vizena, Carolyn
Swan, Marc C
Furniss, Dominic
Rodrigues, Jeremy
author_facet Harrison, Conrad
Apon, Inge
Ardouin, Kenny
Sidey-Gibbons, Chris
Klassen, Anne
Cano, Stefan
Wong Riff, Karen
Pusic, Andrea
Versnel, Sarah
Koudstaal, Maarten
Allori, Alexander C
Rogers-Vizena, Carolyn
Swan, Marc C
Furniss, Dominic
Rodrigues, Jeremy
author_sort Harrison, Conrad
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Routine use of patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) and computerized adaptive tests (CATs) may improve care in a range of surgical conditions. However, most available CATs are neither condition-specific nor coproduced with patients and lack clinically relevant score interpretation. Recently, a PROM called the CLEFT-Q has been developed for use in the treatment of cleft lip or palate (CL/P), but the assessment burden may be limiting its uptake into clinical practice. OBJECTIVE: We aimed to develop a CAT for the CLEFT-Q, which could facilitate the uptake of the CLEFT-Q PROM internationally. We aimed to conduct this work with a novel patient-centered approach and make source code available as an open-source framework for CAT development in other surgical conditions. METHODS: CATs were developed with the Rasch measurement theory, using full-length CLEFT-Q responses collected during the CLEFT-Q field test (this included 2434 patients across 12 countries). These algorithms were validated in Monte Carlo simulations involving full-length CLEFT-Q responses collected from 536 patients. In these simulations, the CAT algorithms approximated full-length CLEFT-Q scores iteratively, using progressively fewer items from the full-length PROM. Agreement between full-length CLEFT-Q score and CAT score at different assessment lengths was measured using the Pearson correlation coefficient, root-mean-square error (RMSE), and 95% limits of agreement. CAT settings, including the number of items to be included in the final assessments, were determined in a multistakeholder workshop that included patients and health care professionals. A user interface was developed for the platform, and it was prospectively piloted in the United Kingdom and the Netherlands. Interviews were conducted with 6 patients and 4 clinicians to explore end-user experience. RESULTS: The length of all 8 CLEFT-Q scales in the International Consortium for Health Outcomes Measurement (ICHOM) Standard Set combined was reduced from 76 to 59 items, and at this length, CAT assessments reproduced full-length CLEFT-Q scores accurately (with correlations between full-length CLEFT-Q score and CAT score exceeding 0.97, and the RMSE ranging from 2 to 5 out of 100). Workshop stakeholders considered this the optimal balance between accuracy and assessment burden. The platform was perceived to improve clinical communication and facilitate shared decision-making. CONCLUSIONS: Our platform is likely to facilitate routine CLEFT-Q uptake, and this may have a positive impact on clinical care. Our free source code enables other researchers to rapidly and economically reproduce this work for other PROMs.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10185334
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-101853342023-05-16 The Development, Deployment, and Evaluation of the CLEFT-Q Computerized Adaptive Test: A Multimethods Approach Contributing to Personalized, Person-Centered Health Assessments in Plastic Surgery Harrison, Conrad Apon, Inge Ardouin, Kenny Sidey-Gibbons, Chris Klassen, Anne Cano, Stefan Wong Riff, Karen Pusic, Andrea Versnel, Sarah Koudstaal, Maarten Allori, Alexander C Rogers-Vizena, Carolyn Swan, Marc C Furniss, Dominic Rodrigues, Jeremy J Med Internet Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: Routine use of patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) and computerized adaptive tests (CATs) may improve care in a range of surgical conditions. However, most available CATs are neither condition-specific nor coproduced with patients and lack clinically relevant score interpretation. Recently, a PROM called the CLEFT-Q has been developed for use in the treatment of cleft lip or palate (CL/P), but the assessment burden may be limiting its uptake into clinical practice. OBJECTIVE: We aimed to develop a CAT for the CLEFT-Q, which could facilitate the uptake of the CLEFT-Q PROM internationally. We aimed to conduct this work with a novel patient-centered approach and make source code available as an open-source framework for CAT development in other surgical conditions. METHODS: CATs were developed with the Rasch measurement theory, using full-length CLEFT-Q responses collected during the CLEFT-Q field test (this included 2434 patients across 12 countries). These algorithms were validated in Monte Carlo simulations involving full-length CLEFT-Q responses collected from 536 patients. In these simulations, the CAT algorithms approximated full-length CLEFT-Q scores iteratively, using progressively fewer items from the full-length PROM. Agreement between full-length CLEFT-Q score and CAT score at different assessment lengths was measured using the Pearson correlation coefficient, root-mean-square error (RMSE), and 95% limits of agreement. CAT settings, including the number of items to be included in the final assessments, were determined in a multistakeholder workshop that included patients and health care professionals. A user interface was developed for the platform, and it was prospectively piloted in the United Kingdom and the Netherlands. Interviews were conducted with 6 patients and 4 clinicians to explore end-user experience. RESULTS: The length of all 8 CLEFT-Q scales in the International Consortium for Health Outcomes Measurement (ICHOM) Standard Set combined was reduced from 76 to 59 items, and at this length, CAT assessments reproduced full-length CLEFT-Q scores accurately (with correlations between full-length CLEFT-Q score and CAT score exceeding 0.97, and the RMSE ranging from 2 to 5 out of 100). Workshop stakeholders considered this the optimal balance between accuracy and assessment burden. The platform was perceived to improve clinical communication and facilitate shared decision-making. CONCLUSIONS: Our platform is likely to facilitate routine CLEFT-Q uptake, and this may have a positive impact on clinical care. Our free source code enables other researchers to rapidly and economically reproduce this work for other PROMs. JMIR Publications 2023-04-27 /pmc/articles/PMC10185334/ /pubmed/37104031 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/41870 Text en ©Conrad Harrison, Inge Apon, Kenny Ardouin, Chris Sidey-Gibbons, Anne Klassen, Stefan Cano, Karen Wong Riff, Andrea Pusic, Sarah Versnel, Maarten Koudstaal, Alexander C Allori, Carolyn Rogers-Vizena, Marc C Swan, Dominic Furniss, Jeremy Rodrigues. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (https://www.jmir.org), 27.04.2023. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://www.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Harrison, Conrad
Apon, Inge
Ardouin, Kenny
Sidey-Gibbons, Chris
Klassen, Anne
Cano, Stefan
Wong Riff, Karen
Pusic, Andrea
Versnel, Sarah
Koudstaal, Maarten
Allori, Alexander C
Rogers-Vizena, Carolyn
Swan, Marc C
Furniss, Dominic
Rodrigues, Jeremy
The Development, Deployment, and Evaluation of the CLEFT-Q Computerized Adaptive Test: A Multimethods Approach Contributing to Personalized, Person-Centered Health Assessments in Plastic Surgery
title The Development, Deployment, and Evaluation of the CLEFT-Q Computerized Adaptive Test: A Multimethods Approach Contributing to Personalized, Person-Centered Health Assessments in Plastic Surgery
title_full The Development, Deployment, and Evaluation of the CLEFT-Q Computerized Adaptive Test: A Multimethods Approach Contributing to Personalized, Person-Centered Health Assessments in Plastic Surgery
title_fullStr The Development, Deployment, and Evaluation of the CLEFT-Q Computerized Adaptive Test: A Multimethods Approach Contributing to Personalized, Person-Centered Health Assessments in Plastic Surgery
title_full_unstemmed The Development, Deployment, and Evaluation of the CLEFT-Q Computerized Adaptive Test: A Multimethods Approach Contributing to Personalized, Person-Centered Health Assessments in Plastic Surgery
title_short The Development, Deployment, and Evaluation of the CLEFT-Q Computerized Adaptive Test: A Multimethods Approach Contributing to Personalized, Person-Centered Health Assessments in Plastic Surgery
title_sort development, deployment, and evaluation of the cleft-q computerized adaptive test: a multimethods approach contributing to personalized, person-centered health assessments in plastic surgery
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10185334/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37104031
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/41870
work_keys_str_mv AT harrisonconrad thedevelopmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT aponinge thedevelopmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT ardouinkenny thedevelopmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT sideygibbonschris thedevelopmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT klassenanne thedevelopmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT canostefan thedevelopmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT wongriffkaren thedevelopmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT pusicandrea thedevelopmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT versnelsarah thedevelopmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT koudstaalmaarten thedevelopmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT allorialexanderc thedevelopmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT rogersvizenacarolyn thedevelopmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT swanmarcc thedevelopmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT furnissdominic thedevelopmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT rodriguesjeremy thedevelopmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT harrisonconrad developmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT aponinge developmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT ardouinkenny developmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT sideygibbonschris developmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT klassenanne developmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT canostefan developmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT wongriffkaren developmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT pusicandrea developmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT versnelsarah developmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT koudstaalmaarten developmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT allorialexanderc developmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT rogersvizenacarolyn developmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT swanmarcc developmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT furnissdominic developmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery
AT rodriguesjeremy developmentdeploymentandevaluationofthecleftqcomputerizedadaptivetestamultimethodsapproachcontributingtopersonalizedpersoncenteredhealthassessmentsinplasticsurgery