학술논문

Customizing CAT Administration of the PROMIS Misuse of Prescription Pain Medication Item Bank for Patients with Chronic Pain.
Document Type
Article
Source
Pain Medicine. Jul2021, Vol. 22 Issue 7, p1669-1675. 7p.
Subject
*COMPUTER adaptive testing
*CHRONIC pain
*NARCOTICS
*SUBSTANCE abuse
*RESEARCH methodology evaluation
*PSYCHOMETRICS
*QUESTIONNAIRES
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*MEDICAL prescriptions
*ANXIETY
*PAIN management
Language
ISSN
1526-2375
Abstract
Objective The 22-item PROMIS®-Rx Pain Medication Misuse item bank (Bank-22) imposes a high response burden. This study aimed to characterize the performance of the Bank-22 in a computer adaptive testing (CAT) setting based on varied stopping rules. Methods The 22 items were administered to 288 patients. We performed a CAT simulation using default stopping rules (CATPROMIS). In 5 other simulations, a "best health" response rule was added to decrease response burden. This rule stopped CAT administration when a participant selected "never" to a specified number of initial Bank-22 items (2–6 in this study, designated CATAlt2-Alt6). The Bank-22 and 7-item short form (SF-7) scores were compared to scores based on CATPROMIS, and the 5 CAT variations. Results Bank-22 scores correlated highly with the SF-7 and CATPROMIS, Alt5, Alt6 scores (r =0.87–0.95) and moderately with CATAlt2- Alt4 scores (r =0.63–0.74). In all CAT conditions, the greatest differences with Bank-22 scores were at the lower end of misuse T-scores. The smallest differences with Bank-22 and CATPROMIS scores were observed with CATAlt5 and CATAlt6. Compared to the SF-7, CATAlt5 and CATAlt6 reduced overall response burden by about 42%. Finally, the correlations between PROMIS-Rx Misuse and Anxiety T-scores remained relatively unchanged across the conditions (r =0.31–0.43, Ps <.001). Conclusions Applying a stopping rule based on number of initial "best health" responses reduced response burden for respondents with lower levels of misuse. The tradeoff was less measurement precision for those individuals, which could be an acceptable tradeoff when the chief concern is in discriminating higher levels of misuse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]