The Development and Validation of a Self‐Administered Quality‐of‐Life Outcome Measure for Young, Active Patients With Symptomatic Hip Disease: The International Hip Outcome Tool (iHOT‐33)

Nicholas G. Mohtadi(University of Calgary), Damian Griffin(University of Warwick), M. Elizabeth Pedersen(University of Alberta), Denise Chan(University of Calgary), Marc R. Safran(Emergency University), Nicholas Parsons(University of Warwick), Jon K. Sekiya(University of Michigan), Bryan T. Kelly(Cornell University), Jason Werle(University of Calgary), Michael Leunig(Schulthess-Klinik), Joseph C. McCarthy(Massachusetts General Hospital), Hal David Martin(Oklahoma Department of Rehabilitation Services), J. W. Thomas Byrd(Tennessee Orthopaedic Alliance), Marc J. Philippon(Steadman Philippon Research Institute), RobRoy L. Martin(Duquesne University), Carlos A. Guanche(Southern California Orthopedic Institute), John C. Clohisy(Washington University in St. Louis), Thomas Sampson(State Street (United States)), Mininder S. Kocher(Boston Children's Hospital), Christopher M. Larson(Minnesota Orthopedic Sports Medicine Institute)
Arthroscopy The Journal of Arthroscopic and Related Surgery
April 26, 2012
Cited by 473

Abstract

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to develop a self-administered evaluative tool to measure health-related quality of life in young, active patients with hip disorders. METHODS: This outcome measure was developed for active patients (aged 18 to 60 years, Tegner activity level ≥ 4) presenting with a variety of symptomatic hip conditions. This multicenter study recruited patients from international hip arthroscopy and arthroplasty surgeon practices. The outcome was created using a process of item generation (51 patients), item reduction (150 patients), and pretesting (31 patients). The questionnaire was tested for test-retest reliability (123 patients); face, content, and construct validity (51 patients); and responsiveness over a 6-month period in post-arthroscopy patients (27 patients). RESULTS: Initially, 146 items were identified. This number was reduced to 60 through item reduction, and the items were categorized into 4 domains: (1) symptoms and functional limitations; (2) sports and recreational physical activities; (3) job-related concerns; and (4) social, emotional, and lifestyle concerns. The items were then formatted using a visual analog scale. Test-retest reliability showed Pearson correlations greater than 0.80 for 33 of the 60 questions. The intraclass correlation statistic was 0.78, and the Cronbach α was .99. Face validity and content validity were ensured during development, and construct validity was shown with a correlation of 0.81 to the Non-Arthritic Hip Score. Responsiveness was shown with a paired t test (P ≤ .01), effect size of 2.0, standardized response mean of 1.7, responsiveness ratio of 6.7, and minimal clinically important difference of 6 points. CONCLUSIONS: We have developed a new quality-of-life patient-reported outcome measure, the 33-item International Hip Outcome Tool (iHOT-33). This questionnaire uses a visual analog scale response format designed for computer self-administration by young, active patients with hip pathology. Its development has followed the most rigorous methodology involving a very large number of patients. The iHOT-33 has been shown to be reliable; shows face, content, and construct validity; and is highly responsive to clinical change. In our opinion the iHOT-33 can be used as a primary outcome measure for prospective patient evaluation and randomized clinical trials.


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