Zahinoor Ismail , Stine R. Meehan , Anja Farovik , Maia Miguelez , Shivani Kapadia , Stephane Alexandre Regnier , Zhen Zhang , T. Michelle Brown , Mirline Milien , Roger S. McIntyre
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
Improved patient life engagement is a meaningful treatment goal in schizophrenia that cannot be satisfactorily measured using existing tools. This research aimed to determine whether certain items from the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) can assess patient life engagement in schizophrenia.
Methods
Three approaches were used to identify PANSS items that reflect patient life engagement: (1) a panel discussion with expert psychiatrists (n = 4); (2) interviews with patients with schizophrenia (n = 20); and (3) a principal component analysis to explore clustering of items (n = 954 from three randomized controlled trials). Internal consistency was assessed by Cronbach's alpha and item–total correlations. A minimal clinically important difference (MCID) was determined by anchor- and distribution-based methods.
Results
Expert psychiatrists identified 11 relevant items, and patients rated 13 items as “very relevant” to patient life engagement, most of which clustered in the principal component analysis. Considering all results, a composite set of 14 PANSS items that may be relevant to patient life engagement in schizophrenia was devised: P2, N1, N2, N3, N4, N5, N6, N7, G6, G7, G11, G13, G15, G16 (Cronbach's alpha, 0.84; item–total correlations, 0.35–0.56, indicating acceptable correlation with the underlying concept; exception: G6 [depression], 0.19). An MCID of 5 points (small/moderate improvement) or 10 points (large improvement) may be appropriate.
Conclusions
A subset of 14 PANSS items may be used to reflect patient life engagement in clinical practice/trials in schizophrenia, complementing the results of traditional psychiatric symptom scales with a patient-centered outcome that is relevant to real-world treatment goals.
期刊介绍:
As official journal of the Schizophrenia International Research Society (SIRS) Schizophrenia Research is THE journal of choice for international researchers and clinicians to share their work with the global schizophrenia research community. More than 6000 institutes have online or print (or both) access to this journal - the largest specialist journal in the field, with the largest readership!
Schizophrenia Research''s time to first decision is as fast as 6 weeks and its publishing speed is as fast as 4 weeks until online publication (corrected proof/Article in Press) after acceptance and 14 weeks from acceptance until publication in a printed issue.
The journal publishes novel papers that really contribute to understanding the biology and treatment of schizophrenic disorders; Schizophrenia Research brings together biological, clinical and psychological research in order to stimulate the synthesis of findings from all disciplines involved in improving patient outcomes in schizophrenia.