A review of preference-based measures for the assessment of quality of life in children and adolescents with cerebral palsy
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Authors
Mpundu-Kaambwa, Christine
Chen, Gang
Huynh, Elisabeth
Russo, Remo
Ratcliffe, Julie
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Kluwer Academic Publishers
Abstract
Abstract
Purpose To examine the psychometric properties and suitability for use within the context of cerebral palsy research in
children and adolescents of generic preference-based outcome measures (PROMs).
Methods Nine electronic databases were searched in this systematic review. The consensus-based standards for the selection
of health measurement instruments (COSMIN) checklist were used to measure the psychometric properties of the PROMs.
A meta-analysis was used to pool correlation coefficients for convergent validity using the Schmidt–Hunter method. Heterogeneity
was assessed using the I-squared statistic (I2).
Results Four preference-based PROMs were identified from eight studies: Health Utilities Index—Mark 2 and 3 (HUI-2
and HUI-3, respectively), the Assessment Quality of Life-4 dimension (AQoL-4D) and the EuroQol-5 dimension 3 level
(EQ-5D-3L). Only the HUI system was primarily developed for application with children/adolescents though health-state
values for scoring the PROM were elicited from adults. The HUI-3 covered the most relevant constructs though it excludes
important modules of health-related quality of life (HRQOL) such as activity limitations and participation restrictions. In
terms of psychometric properties, evidence was presented for only five of COSMIN measurement properties: reliability
(HUI3), measurement error (HUI-3), content validity (HUI-2 and HUI-3), Hypotheses testing (HUI-3 and AQoL-4D) and
criterion validity (HUI-3). No papers reported on internal consistency, structural validity, cross-cultural validity or responsiveness
of the preference-based measures in children and adolescents with cerebral palsy.
Conclusions This review highlights the dearth in studies using preference-based PROMs to measure HRQOL associated
with cerebral palsy in children and adolescents. The HUI-3 demonstrated the strongest psychometric properties, though it
does not cover all dimensions relevant to this population.
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Quality of Life Research
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Restricted until
2099-12-31