Validation of the Haemophilia & Exercise Project-Test-Questionnaire (HEP-Test-Q)-An instrument for the assessment of subjective physical functioning in children with haemophilia

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Validation of the Haemophilia & Exercise Project-Test-Questionnaire (HEP-Test-Q)-An instrument for the assessment of subjective physical functioning in children with haemophilia. / von Mackensen, S; Hilberg, T; Valentino, L A; Kurnik, K; Khair, K.

in: HAEMOPHILIA, Jahrgang 24, Nr. 6, 11.2018, S. 888-895.

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@article{fb362cf5cd894152a9ac484a61101ac8,
title = "Validation of the Haemophilia & Exercise Project-Test-Questionnaire (HEP-Test-Q)-An instrument for the assessment of subjective physical functioning in children with haemophilia",
abstract = "INTRODUCTION: Contemporary haemophilia management recommends sport and physical activity in children with haemophilia. Assessment of subjective physical functioning requires standardized and validated instruments.AIMS: To adapt and psychometrically test the adult Haemophilia & Exercise Project-Test-Questionnaire (HEP-Test-Q) for children (aged 6-17 years).METHODS: In discussion rounds with children, single items of the adult HEP-Test-Q were reformulated to make them understandable without changing the item concept. The validation of the child-adapted version in children with haemophilia (n = 228) included pre-testing with feasibility testing, cognitive interviewing (n = 34), pilot-testing of the revised version in the EIS Study (n = 67) and field-testing in the SO-FIT Study (n = 127).RESULTS: Pre-testing revealed a completion time of 8.2 ± 4.1 minutes and children liked the instrument. Cognitive interviews demonstrated that most items were easy to understand; 9 items were reformulated. Pilot-testing demonstrated good psychometric characteristics in terms of reliability (α = .94 Total Score) and validity. Convergent validity testing showed moderate correlations with the Haemo-QoL (r = -.491), but low correlations with the Petrini Score (r = -.293). Known groups' validity revealed significant differences in clinical subgroups; chronic pain (P < .002) and target joints (P < .021). Field-testing confirmed psychometric characteristics; Cronbach's alpha ranged from α = .80 ({"}endurance{"}) to α = .94 (Total Score). The child-adapted HEP-Test-Q showed moderate correlations with the PedHAL (r = .634, P < .0001) and the Haemo-QoL SF (r = -.575, P < .0001). Known groups' validity testing proved that the HEP-Test-Q could discriminate between clinical subgroups.CONCLUSION: The child-adapted HEP-Test-Q is a short, practical and acceptable instrument for the assessment of subjective physical functioning. Outcomes can be compared to adults because item concepts are identical to the adult version.",
keywords = "Adolescent, Child, Exercise, Feasibility Studies, Female, Hemophilia A/physiopathology, Humans, Male, Reproducibility of Results, Surveys and Questionnaires",
author = "{von Mackensen}, S and T Hilberg and Valentino, {L A} and K Kurnik and K Khair",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.",
year = "2018",
month = nov,
doi = "10.1111/hae.13533",
language = "English",
volume = "24",
pages = "888--895",
journal = "HAEMOPHILIA",
issn = "1351-8216",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Validation of the Haemophilia & Exercise Project-Test-Questionnaire (HEP-Test-Q)-An instrument for the assessment of subjective physical functioning in children with haemophilia

AU - von Mackensen, S

AU - Hilberg, T

AU - Valentino, L A

AU - Kurnik, K

AU - Khair, K

N1 - © 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

PY - 2018/11

Y1 - 2018/11

N2 - INTRODUCTION: Contemporary haemophilia management recommends sport and physical activity in children with haemophilia. Assessment of subjective physical functioning requires standardized and validated instruments.AIMS: To adapt and psychometrically test the adult Haemophilia & Exercise Project-Test-Questionnaire (HEP-Test-Q) for children (aged 6-17 years).METHODS: In discussion rounds with children, single items of the adult HEP-Test-Q were reformulated to make them understandable without changing the item concept. The validation of the child-adapted version in children with haemophilia (n = 228) included pre-testing with feasibility testing, cognitive interviewing (n = 34), pilot-testing of the revised version in the EIS Study (n = 67) and field-testing in the SO-FIT Study (n = 127).RESULTS: Pre-testing revealed a completion time of 8.2 ± 4.1 minutes and children liked the instrument. Cognitive interviews demonstrated that most items were easy to understand; 9 items were reformulated. Pilot-testing demonstrated good psychometric characteristics in terms of reliability (α = .94 Total Score) and validity. Convergent validity testing showed moderate correlations with the Haemo-QoL (r = -.491), but low correlations with the Petrini Score (r = -.293). Known groups' validity revealed significant differences in clinical subgroups; chronic pain (P < .002) and target joints (P < .021). Field-testing confirmed psychometric characteristics; Cronbach's alpha ranged from α = .80 ("endurance") to α = .94 (Total Score). The child-adapted HEP-Test-Q showed moderate correlations with the PedHAL (r = .634, P < .0001) and the Haemo-QoL SF (r = -.575, P < .0001). Known groups' validity testing proved that the HEP-Test-Q could discriminate between clinical subgroups.CONCLUSION: The child-adapted HEP-Test-Q is a short, practical and acceptable instrument for the assessment of subjective physical functioning. Outcomes can be compared to adults because item concepts are identical to the adult version.

AB - INTRODUCTION: Contemporary haemophilia management recommends sport and physical activity in children with haemophilia. Assessment of subjective physical functioning requires standardized and validated instruments.AIMS: To adapt and psychometrically test the adult Haemophilia & Exercise Project-Test-Questionnaire (HEP-Test-Q) for children (aged 6-17 years).METHODS: In discussion rounds with children, single items of the adult HEP-Test-Q were reformulated to make them understandable without changing the item concept. The validation of the child-adapted version in children with haemophilia (n = 228) included pre-testing with feasibility testing, cognitive interviewing (n = 34), pilot-testing of the revised version in the EIS Study (n = 67) and field-testing in the SO-FIT Study (n = 127).RESULTS: Pre-testing revealed a completion time of 8.2 ± 4.1 minutes and children liked the instrument. Cognitive interviews demonstrated that most items were easy to understand; 9 items were reformulated. Pilot-testing demonstrated good psychometric characteristics in terms of reliability (α = .94 Total Score) and validity. Convergent validity testing showed moderate correlations with the Haemo-QoL (r = -.491), but low correlations with the Petrini Score (r = -.293). Known groups' validity revealed significant differences in clinical subgroups; chronic pain (P < .002) and target joints (P < .021). Field-testing confirmed psychometric characteristics; Cronbach's alpha ranged from α = .80 ("endurance") to α = .94 (Total Score). The child-adapted HEP-Test-Q showed moderate correlations with the PedHAL (r = .634, P < .0001) and the Haemo-QoL SF (r = -.575, P < .0001). Known groups' validity testing proved that the HEP-Test-Q could discriminate between clinical subgroups.CONCLUSION: The child-adapted HEP-Test-Q is a short, practical and acceptable instrument for the assessment of subjective physical functioning. Outcomes can be compared to adults because item concepts are identical to the adult version.

KW - Adolescent

KW - Child

KW - Exercise

KW - Feasibility Studies

KW - Female

KW - Hemophilia A/physiopathology

KW - Humans

KW - Male

KW - Reproducibility of Results

KW - Surveys and Questionnaires

U2 - 10.1111/hae.13533

DO - 10.1111/hae.13533

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 30004619

VL - 24

SP - 888

EP - 895

JO - HAEMOPHILIA

JF - HAEMOPHILIA

SN - 1351-8216

IS - 6

ER -