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The case for an international patient-reported outcomes measurement information system (PROMIS(®)) initiative

Patient-reported outcomes (PROs) play an increasingly important role in clinical practice and research. Modern psychometric methods such as item response theory (IRT) enable the creation of item banks that support fixed-length forms as well as computerized adaptive testing (CAT), often resulting in...

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Autores principales: Alonso, Jordi, Bartlett, Susan J, Rose, Matthias, Aaronson, Neil K, Chaplin, John E, Efficace, Fabio, Leplège, Alain, LU, Aiping, Tulsky, David S, Raat, Hein, Ravens-Sieberer, Ulrike, Revicki, Dennis, Terwee, Caroline B, Valderas, Jose M, Cella, David, Forrest, Christopher B
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3879205/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24359143
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-7525-11-210
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author Alonso, Jordi
Bartlett, Susan J
Rose, Matthias
Aaronson, Neil K
Chaplin, John E
Efficace, Fabio
Leplège, Alain
LU, Aiping
Tulsky, David S
Raat, Hein
Ravens-Sieberer, Ulrike
Revicki, Dennis
Terwee, Caroline B
Valderas, Jose M
Cella, David
Forrest, Christopher B
author_facet Alonso, Jordi
Bartlett, Susan J
Rose, Matthias
Aaronson, Neil K
Chaplin, John E
Efficace, Fabio
Leplège, Alain
LU, Aiping
Tulsky, David S
Raat, Hein
Ravens-Sieberer, Ulrike
Revicki, Dennis
Terwee, Caroline B
Valderas, Jose M
Cella, David
Forrest, Christopher B
author_sort Alonso, Jordi
collection PubMed
description Patient-reported outcomes (PROs) play an increasingly important role in clinical practice and research. Modern psychometric methods such as item response theory (IRT) enable the creation of item banks that support fixed-length forms as well as computerized adaptive testing (CAT), often resulting in improved measurement precision and responsiveness. Here we describe and discuss the case for developing an international core set of PROs building from the US PROMIS(®) network. PROMIS is a U.S.-based cooperative group of research sites and centers of excellence convened to develop and standardize PRO measures across studies and settings. If extended to a global collaboration, PROMIS has the potential to transform PRO measurement by creating a shared, unifying terminology and metric for reporting of common symptoms and functional life domains. Extending a common set of standardized PRO measures to the international community offers great potential for improving patient-centered research, clinical trials reporting, population monitoring, and health care worldwide. Benefits of such standardization include the possibility of: international syntheses (such as meta-analyses) of research findings; international population monitoring and policy development; health services administrators and planners access to relevant information on the populations they serve; better assessment and monitoring of patients by providers; and improved shared decision making. The goal of the current PROMIS International initiative is to ensure that item banks are translated and culturally adapted for use in adults and children in as many countries as possible. The process includes 3 key steps: translation/cultural adaptation, calibration, and validation. A universal translation, an approach focusing on commonalities, rather than differences across versions developed in regions or countries speaking the same language, is proposed to ensure conceptual equivalence for all items. International item calibration using nationally representative samples of adults and children within countries is essential to demonstrate that all items possess expected strong measurement properties. Finally, it is important to demonstrate that the PROMIS measures are valid, reliable and responsive to change when used in an international context. IRT item banking will allow for tailoring within countries and facilitate growth and evolution of PROs through contributions from the international measurement community. A number of opportunities and challenges of international development of PROs item banks are discussed.
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spelling pubmed-38792052014-01-03 The case for an international patient-reported outcomes measurement information system (PROMIS(®)) initiative Alonso, Jordi Bartlett, Susan J Rose, Matthias Aaronson, Neil K Chaplin, John E Efficace, Fabio Leplège, Alain LU, Aiping Tulsky, David S Raat, Hein Ravens-Sieberer, Ulrike Revicki, Dennis Terwee, Caroline B Valderas, Jose M Cella, David Forrest, Christopher B Health Qual Life Outcomes Commentary Patient-reported outcomes (PROs) play an increasingly important role in clinical practice and research. Modern psychometric methods such as item response theory (IRT) enable the creation of item banks that support fixed-length forms as well as computerized adaptive testing (CAT), often resulting in improved measurement precision and responsiveness. Here we describe and discuss the case for developing an international core set of PROs building from the US PROMIS(®) network. PROMIS is a U.S.-based cooperative group of research sites and centers of excellence convened to develop and standardize PRO measures across studies and settings. If extended to a global collaboration, PROMIS has the potential to transform PRO measurement by creating a shared, unifying terminology and metric for reporting of common symptoms and functional life domains. Extending a common set of standardized PRO measures to the international community offers great potential for improving patient-centered research, clinical trials reporting, population monitoring, and health care worldwide. Benefits of such standardization include the possibility of: international syntheses (such as meta-analyses) of research findings; international population monitoring and policy development; health services administrators and planners access to relevant information on the populations they serve; better assessment and monitoring of patients by providers; and improved shared decision making. The goal of the current PROMIS International initiative is to ensure that item banks are translated and culturally adapted for use in adults and children in as many countries as possible. The process includes 3 key steps: translation/cultural adaptation, calibration, and validation. A universal translation, an approach focusing on commonalities, rather than differences across versions developed in regions or countries speaking the same language, is proposed to ensure conceptual equivalence for all items. International item calibration using nationally representative samples of adults and children within countries is essential to demonstrate that all items possess expected strong measurement properties. Finally, it is important to demonstrate that the PROMIS measures are valid, reliable and responsive to change when used in an international context. IRT item banking will allow for tailoring within countries and facilitate growth and evolution of PROs through contributions from the international measurement community. A number of opportunities and challenges of international development of PROs item banks are discussed. BioMed Central 2013-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC3879205/ /pubmed/24359143 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-7525-11-210 Text en Copyright © 2013 Alonso et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Commentary
Alonso, Jordi
Bartlett, Susan J
Rose, Matthias
Aaronson, Neil K
Chaplin, John E
Efficace, Fabio
Leplège, Alain
LU, Aiping
Tulsky, David S
Raat, Hein
Ravens-Sieberer, Ulrike
Revicki, Dennis
Terwee, Caroline B
Valderas, Jose M
Cella, David
Forrest, Christopher B
The case for an international patient-reported outcomes measurement information system (PROMIS(®)) initiative
title The case for an international patient-reported outcomes measurement information system (PROMIS(®)) initiative
title_full The case for an international patient-reported outcomes measurement information system (PROMIS(®)) initiative
title_fullStr The case for an international patient-reported outcomes measurement information system (PROMIS(®)) initiative
title_full_unstemmed The case for an international patient-reported outcomes measurement information system (PROMIS(®)) initiative
title_short The case for an international patient-reported outcomes measurement information system (PROMIS(®)) initiative
title_sort case for an international patient-reported outcomes measurement information system (promis(®)) initiative
topic Commentary
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3879205/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24359143
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-7525-11-210
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