Article (Scientific journals)
Content Validity and Psychometric Evaluation of the Crohn's Symptom Severity (CSS) Questionnaire in Patients with Moderately to Severely Active Crohn's Disease.
Louis, Edouard; Lee, Wan-Ju; Litcher-Kelly, Leighann et al.
2024In Advances in Therapy, 41 (9), p. 3678 - 3705
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Keywords :
Crohn’s disease; Psychometrics; Qualitative interviews; Score interpretation; Symptoms; Antibodies, Monoclonal; risankizumab; Adolescent; Adult; Female; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Young Adult; Antibodies, Monoclonal/therapeutic use; Patient Reported Outcome Measures; Reproducibility of Results; Surveys and Questionnaires/standards; Clinical Trials, Phase III as Topic; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic; Crohn Disease/psychology; Severity of Illness Index; Surveys and Questionnaires; Pharmacology (medical)
Abstract :
[en] [en] INTRODUCTION: Individuals living with Crohn's disease (CD) experience burdensome symptoms. As such, it is important to measure CD symptom severity in clinical research. The goal of this study was to evaluate the content validity, psychometric performance, and score interpretability of a new patient-reported instrument, the Crohn's Symptom Severity (CSS) questionnaire, among adolescents and adults with moderately to severely active CD. METHODS: Cognitive debriefing interviews (N = 30; n = 20 adults, n = 10 adolescents) were conducted to evaluate the content validity of the CSS. Additionally, the CSS scores were evaluated for reliability and validity using data from a phase 3 randomized clinical trial of risankizumab (NCT03105128; N = 850). Meaningful within-patient change (MWPC) thresholds were estimated using anchor-based methods. RESULTS: All interview participants (n = 30/30, 100.00%) reported the CSS was easy to complete and most participants (n = 28/29, 96.55%) reported that the CSS was relevant to their experience of CD. Among the clinical trial subjects (N = 850) the following was found for the CSS: mostly acceptable item-total correlations (0.26-0.79); weak to moderate inter-item correlations (r = 0.07-0.57), good internal consistency (Cronbach's α = 0.76-0.87); intraclass correlation coefficients ranged from 0.48 to 0.70, not consistently exceeding the acceptable range for test-retest reliability (0.70); acceptable convergent validity and known-groups results; and demonstrated sensitivity to change. Analyses supported an MWPC estimate of 6-11 points. CONCLUSIONS: This study supports use of the CSS for measuring CD symptoms and sleep impact among adolescents and adults aged 16 and older with moderately to severely active CD in clinical research. TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT03105128 (registration date 4 April 2017).
Disciplines :
Gastroenterology & hepatology
Author, co-author :
Louis, Edouard  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département des sciences cliniques > Hépato-gastroentérologie
Lee, Wan-Ju ;  AbbVie Inc, Chicago, IL, USA
Litcher-Kelly, Leighann ;  Adelphi Values, Boston, MA, USA
Ollis, Sarah ;  Adelphi Values, Boston, MA, USA
Pranschke, Emma ;  Adelphi Values, Boston, MA, USA
Fitzgerald, Kristina;  AbbVie Inc, Chicago, IL, USA
Lacerda, Ana Paula ;  AbbVie Inc, Chicago, IL, USA
Neimark, Ezequiel;  AbbVie Inc, Chicago, IL, USA
Sanchez Gonzalez, Yuri ;  AbbVie Inc, Chicago, IL, USA
Panés, Julian ;  Hospital Clínic de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
Language :
English
Title :
Content Validity and Psychometric Evaluation of the Crohn's Symptom Severity (CSS) Questionnaire in Patients with Moderately to Severely Active Crohn's Disease.
Publication date :
September 2024
Journal title :
Advances in Therapy
ISSN :
0741-238X
eISSN :
1865-8652
Publisher :
Adis, United States
Volume :
41
Issue :
9
Pages :
3678 - 3705
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Funders :
AbbVie
Funding text :
Writing support was provided by Sylvia Su of Adelphi Values and funded by AbbVie, Inc.
Commentary :
Received: March 12, 2024 / Accepted: June 6, 2024 / Published online: August 6, 2024 © The Author(s) 2024
Available on ORBi :
since 17 December 2025

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