Psychometric evaluation of the NTDT-PRO questionnaire for assessing symptoms in patients with non-transfusion-dependent beta-thalassaemia

Abstract

Objectives The non-transfusion-dependent beta-thalassaemia-patient-reported outcome (NTDT-PRO) questionnaire was developed for assessing anaemia-related tiredness/weakness (T/W) and shortness of breath (SoB) among patients with NTDT. Psychometric properties were evaluated using blinded data from the BEYOND trial (NCT03342404). Design Analysis of a phase 2, double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial. Setting USA, Greece, Italy, Lebanon, Thailand and the UK. Participants Adults (≥18 years) (N=145) with NTDT who had not received a red blood cell transfusion within 8 weeks prior to randomisation, with mean baseline haemoglobin level ≤100 g/L. Measures NTDT-PRO daily scores from baseline until week 24, and scores at select time points for the 36-Item Short Form Health Survey version 2 (SF-36v2), Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Fatigue (FACIT-F) and Patient Global Impression of Severity (PGI-S). Results Cronbach's alpha at weeks 13-24 was 0.95 and 0.84 for the T/W and SoB domains, respectively, indicating acceptable internal consistency reliability. Among participants self-reporting no change in thalassaemia symptoms via the PGI-S between baseline and week 1, intraclass correlation coefficients were 0.94 and 0.92 for the T/W and SoB domains, respectively, indicating excellent test-retest reliability. In a known-groups validity analysis, least-squares mean T/W and SoB scores at weeks 13-24 were worse in participants with worse scores for the FACIT-F Fatigue Subscale (FS), SF-36v2 vitality or PGI-S. Indicating responsiveness, changes in T/W and SoB domain scores were moderately correlated with changes in haemoglobin levels, and strongly correlated with changes in SF-36v2 vitality, FACIT-F FS, select FACIT-F items and the PGI-S. Improvements in least-squares mean T/W and SoB scores were higher in participants with greater improvements in scores on other PROs measuring similar constructs. Conclusions The NTDT-PRO demonstrated adequate psychometric properties to assess anaemia-related symptoms in adults with NTDT and can be used to evaluate treatment efficacy in clinical trials. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.

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Keywords

Anaemia, Blood bank & transfusion medicine, Clinical trials, Adult, Beta-thalassemia, Fatigue, Frailty, Hemoglobins, Humans, Psychometrics, Quality of life, Reproducibility of results, Surveys and questionnaires, Hemoglobin, Anemia, Article, Blood bank, Clinical assessment, Controlled study, Convergent validity, Correlation coefficient, Cronbach alpha coefficient, Double blind procedure, Erythrocyte transfusion, Female, Functional assessment of chronic illness therapy fatigue scale, Greece, Hemoglobin blood level, Human, Internal consistency, Interrater reliability, Italy, Least square analysis, Lebanon, Major clinical study, Male, Non transfusion dependent thalassemia, Outcome assessment, Patient-reported outcome, Phase 2 clinical trial, Physical well-being, Psychometry, Quality control, Questionnaire, Randomized controlled trial, Short form 36, Test retest reliability, Thailand, Transfusion medicine, Weakness, Beta thalassemia, Clinical trial, Complication, Reproducibility

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