Development of a new patient‐reported outcome measure to evaluate treatments for acne and acne scarring: the ACNE‐Q
Summary Background Psychosocial concerns represent important outcomes in studies of treatments for acne and acne scarring. Also important, but largely overlooked, is the concept of appearance. Objectives To design an acne‐specific patient‐reported outcome measure for acne and acne scarring. Methods...
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Veröffentlicht in: | British journal of dermatology (1951) 2019-12, Vol.181 (6), p.1207-1215 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Summary
Background
Psychosocial concerns represent important outcomes in studies of treatments for acne and acne scarring. Also important, but largely overlooked, is the concept of appearance.
Objectives
To design an acne‐specific patient‐reported outcome measure for acne and acne scarring.
Methods
We used a mixed‐methods approach. Phase I involved 21 patient interviews that were audio‐recorded, transcribed and coded. Concepts were identified and developed into scales that were refined through 10 cognitive interviews and input from 16 clinical experts. Phase II involved data collection at hospital and community‐based dermatology clinics in Canada and the U.S.A. Eligible participants were aged 12 years and older with acne and/or acne scars on the face, chest and/or back. Rasch Measurement Theory (RMT) analyses were performed to examine psychometric properties.
Results
Phase I led to the development of seven scales that measure appearance of facial skin, acne (face, chest and back) and acne scars, acne‐specific symptoms and appearance‐related distress. In phase II, 256 patients completed the ACNE‐Q. RMT analysis provided evidence that the items of each scale worked together conceptually and statistically. Most participants scored within the range of measurement for each scale (81·9–93·1%). Reliability was high, with person separation index values and Cronbach alpha values > 0·90 for the appearance scales, ≥ 0·87 for appearance‐related distress and ≥ 0·75 for symptoms. Worse scores on appearance scales correlated with worse symptom scores and more appearance‐related distress.
Conclusions
The ACNE‐Q is a rigorously developed instrument that can be used to measure appearance and other patient‐centred concerns.
What's already known about this topic?
Acne is a common dermatological condition that can have an important impact on psychosocial function.
Current patient‐reported outcome measures specific to acne focus mostly on measuring psychological and social impact.
What does this study add?
The ACNE‐Q provides a set of independently functioning scales that measure appearance of facial, back and chest acne, acne scarring and facial skin.
Additional scales measure appearance‐related distress and acne symptoms.
What are the clinical implications of this work?
ACNE‐Q provides the dermatology community with a rigorously developed patient‐reported measure for acne that can be applied in clinical trials, research and patient care.
The measurement of appearance by ACNE‐ |
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ISSN: | 0007-0963 1365-2133 |
DOI: | 10.1111/bjd.18005 |