Suitability of the animated activity questionnaire for use as computer adaptive test: establishing the AAQ-CAT

Purpose The animated activity questionnaire (AAQ) is a computer-based measure of activity limitations. To answer a question, patients choose the animation of a person performing an activity that matches their own level of limitation. The AAQ has not yet been tested for suitability to be applied as c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Quality of life research 2023-08, Vol.32 (8), p.2403-2413
Hauptverfasser: Liegl, Gregor, Roorda, Leo D., Terwee, Caroline B., Steultjens, Martijn, Roos, Ewa M., Guillemin, Francis, Benedetti, Maria Grazia, Dagfinrud, Hanne, de Carvalho Bastone, Alessandra, Peter, Wilfred F.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Purpose The animated activity questionnaire (AAQ) is a computer-based measure of activity limitations. To answer a question, patients choose the animation of a person performing an activity that matches their own level of limitation. The AAQ has not yet been tested for suitability to be applied as computer-adaptive test (CAT). Thus, the objective of this study was to develop and evaluate an AAQ-based CAT to facilitate the application of the AAQ in daily clinical care. Methods Patients ( n  = 1408) with hip/knee osteoarthritis from Brazil, Denmark, France, The Netherlands, Norway, Spain, and the UK responded to all 17 AAQ items. Assumptions of item-response theory (IRT) modelling were investigated. To establish item parameters for the CAT, a graded response model was estimated. To evaluate the performance of post-hoc simulated AAQ-based CATs, precision, test length, and construct validity (correlations with well-established measures of activity limitations) were evaluated. Results Unidimensionality (CFI = 0.95), measurement invariance ( R 2 -change  .003) of the AAQ were supported. Performing simulated CATs, the mean test length was more than halved (≤ 8 items), while the range of precise measurement (standard error ≤ 0.3) was comparable to the full AAQ. The correlations between original AAQ scores and three AAQ-CAT versions were ≥ 0.95. Correlations of AAQ-CAT scores with patient-reported and performance measures of activity limitations were ≥ 0.60. Conclusion The almost non-verbal AAQ-CAT is an innovative and efficient tool in patients with hip/knee osteoarthritis from various countries, measuring activity limitations with lower respondent burden, but similar precision and construct validity compared to the full AAQ.
ISSN:0962-9343
1573-2649
DOI:10.1007/s11136-023-03402-4