Development and validation of combined symptom-medication scores for allergic rhinitis*
Yazar
Ventura, Maria Teresa
Cardona, Victoria
Casale, Thomas
Cecchi, Lorenzo
Charpin, Denis
Chivato, Tomas
Costa, Elisio M.
Cruz, Alvaro A.
Dramburg, Stephanie
Durham, Stephen R.
De Feo, Giulia
van Wijk, Roy Gerth
Fokkens, Wystke J.
GEMİCİOĞLU, BİLUN
Haahtela, Tari
Illario, Maddalena
Carlos Ivancevich, Juan
Kvedariene, Violeta
Kuna, Piotr
Larenas-Linnemann, Desiree E.
Makris, Michael
Mathieu-Dupas, Eve
Melen, Erik
Morais-Almeida, Mario
Moesges, Ralph
Mullol, Joaquim
Nadeau, Kari C.
Nhan Pham-Thi, Nhan Pham-Thi
O'Hehir, Robyn
Regateiro, Frederico S.
Reitsma, Sietze
Samolinski, Boleslaw
Sousa-Pinto, Bernardo
Azevedo, Luis Filipe
Jutel, Marek
Agache, Ioana
Canonica, G. Walter
Czarlewski, Wienczyslawa
Papadopoulos, Nikolaos G.
Bergmann, Karl-Christian
Devillier, Philippe
Laune, Daniel
Klimek, Ludger
Anto, Aram
Sheikh, Aziz
Stellato, Cristiana
Todo-Bom, Ana
Tomazic, Peter Valentin
Toppila-Salmi, Sanna
Valero, Antonio
Valiulis, Arunas
Wallace, Dana
Waserman, Susan
Yorgancioglu, Arzu
Vries, Govert
Eerd, Michiel
Zieglmayer, Petra
Zuberbier, Torsten
Pfaar, Oliver
Fonseca, Joao Almeida
Bousquet, Jean
Anto, Josep M.
Eklund, Patrik
Almeida, Rute
Bedbrook, Anna
Bosnic-Anticevich, Sinthia
Brough, Helen A.
Brussino, Luisa
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Background Validated combined symptom-medication scores (CSMSs) are needed to investigate the effects of allergic rhinitis treatments. This study aimed to use real-life data from the MASK-air(R) app to generate and validate hypothesis- and data-driven CSMSs. Methods We used MASK-air(R) data to assess the concurrent validity, test-retest reliability and responsiveness of one hypothesis-driven CSMS (modified CSMS: mCSMS), one mixed hypothesis- and data-driven score (mixed score), and several data-driven CSMSs. The latter were generated with MASK-air(R) data following cluster analysis and regression models or factor analysis. These CSMSs were compared with scales measuring (i) the impact of rhinitis on work productivity (visual analogue scale [VAS] of work of MASK-air(R), and Work Productivity and Activity Impairment: Allergy Specific [WPAI-AS]), (ii) quality-of-life (EQ-5D VAS) and (iii) control of allergic diseases (Control of Allergic Rhinitis and Asthma Test [CARAT]). Results We assessed 317,176 days of MASK-air(R) use from 17,780 users aged 16-90 years, in 25 countries. The mCSMS and the factor analyses-based CSMSs displayed poorer validity and responsiveness compared to the remaining CSMSs. The latter displayed moderate-to-strong correlations with the tested comparators, high test-retest reliability and moderate-to-large responsiveness. Among data-driven CSMSs, a better performance was observed for cluster analyses-based CSMSs. High accuracy (capacity of discriminating different levels of rhinitis control) was observed for the latter (AUC-ROC = 0.904) and for the mixed CSMS (AUC-ROC = 0.820). Conclusion The mixed CSMS and the cluster-based CSMSs presented medium-high validity, reliability and accuracy, rendering them as candidates for primary endpoints in future rhinitis trials.
Koleksiyonlar
- Makale [92796]