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MADRID – An international team has developed a new composite health index specifically for use in patients with ankylosing spondylitis.
The Assessment of SpondyloArthritis International Society Health Index (ASAS HI) is based on the ICF (International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health) and includes 17 dichotomous items that ask about patients’ levels of pain, emotional functioning, sleep habits, sexual function, mobility, self-care, life in the community, and employment. The ICF is a comprehensive and already well-recognized and validated means of classifying and describing functioning, disability, and health in a systematic way,
The tool has yet to be "field tested" to see if it can measure changes in health status in response to treatment, Dr. Uta Kiltz said at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology.
Dr. Kiltz, of Rheumazentrum Ruhrgebiet, Herne, Germany, noted that the development of the tool involved five key stages. These have been outlined previously (Rheumatology 2011;50:894-8) and included a preparatory stage in which potential items for inclusion were identified. Dr. Kiltz and her colleagues considered a total of 251 items obtained from more than 60 existing questionnaires, such as the BASFI (Bath Ankylosing Spondylitis Functional Index), the Dougados Functional Index, and the AS Quality of Life Questionnaire.
The investigators then conducted an international, cross-sectional study involving 1,915 patients with AS (mean age, 51 years). In this second phase, they sent a postal survey to patients to ask about various parameters. An expert committee then assessed the results in the third phase and selected 50 items for possible inclusion in the final model. The penultimate stage in the development process involved sending a second postal survey to 628 patients with AS (mean age, 48.5 years).
In the final stage, an expert consensus meeting was held in which the final 17-item tool was agreed upon (Ann. Rheum. Dis. 2013;72:124).
"ASAS HI is a new composite index that captures relevant information on the health status of patients with AS," Dr. Kiltz said. "It is the first disease-specific index which is based on the ICF, and the items represent a whole range of abilities as defined by the ICF."
ASAS HI could eventually be used in clinical trials and clinical practice as a new composite index that captures relevant information on the health status of patients, Dr. Kiltz suggested.
"We are now doing a field test to test the 17 items in a wider range of patients," she said. After this is completed, the specifics of the tool will be published.
Dr. Kiltz had no conflicts of interest.
MADRID – An international team has developed a new composite health index specifically for use in patients with ankylosing spondylitis.
The Assessment of SpondyloArthritis International Society Health Index (ASAS HI) is based on the ICF (International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health) and includes 17 dichotomous items that ask about patients’ levels of pain, emotional functioning, sleep habits, sexual function, mobility, self-care, life in the community, and employment. The ICF is a comprehensive and already well-recognized and validated means of classifying and describing functioning, disability, and health in a systematic way,
The tool has yet to be "field tested" to see if it can measure changes in health status in response to treatment, Dr. Uta Kiltz said at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology.
Dr. Kiltz, of Rheumazentrum Ruhrgebiet, Herne, Germany, noted that the development of the tool involved five key stages. These have been outlined previously (Rheumatology 2011;50:894-8) and included a preparatory stage in which potential items for inclusion were identified. Dr. Kiltz and her colleagues considered a total of 251 items obtained from more than 60 existing questionnaires, such as the BASFI (Bath Ankylosing Spondylitis Functional Index), the Dougados Functional Index, and the AS Quality of Life Questionnaire.
The investigators then conducted an international, cross-sectional study involving 1,915 patients with AS (mean age, 51 years). In this second phase, they sent a postal survey to patients to ask about various parameters. An expert committee then assessed the results in the third phase and selected 50 items for possible inclusion in the final model. The penultimate stage in the development process involved sending a second postal survey to 628 patients with AS (mean age, 48.5 years).
In the final stage, an expert consensus meeting was held in which the final 17-item tool was agreed upon (Ann. Rheum. Dis. 2013;72:124).
"ASAS HI is a new composite index that captures relevant information on the health status of patients with AS," Dr. Kiltz said. "It is the first disease-specific index which is based on the ICF, and the items represent a whole range of abilities as defined by the ICF."
ASAS HI could eventually be used in clinical trials and clinical practice as a new composite index that captures relevant information on the health status of patients, Dr. Kiltz suggested.
"We are now doing a field test to test the 17 items in a wider range of patients," she said. After this is completed, the specifics of the tool will be published.
Dr. Kiltz had no conflicts of interest.
MADRID – An international team has developed a new composite health index specifically for use in patients with ankylosing spondylitis.
The Assessment of SpondyloArthritis International Society Health Index (ASAS HI) is based on the ICF (International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health) and includes 17 dichotomous items that ask about patients’ levels of pain, emotional functioning, sleep habits, sexual function, mobility, self-care, life in the community, and employment. The ICF is a comprehensive and already well-recognized and validated means of classifying and describing functioning, disability, and health in a systematic way,
The tool has yet to be "field tested" to see if it can measure changes in health status in response to treatment, Dr. Uta Kiltz said at the annual European Congress of Rheumatology.
Dr. Kiltz, of Rheumazentrum Ruhrgebiet, Herne, Germany, noted that the development of the tool involved five key stages. These have been outlined previously (Rheumatology 2011;50:894-8) and included a preparatory stage in which potential items for inclusion were identified. Dr. Kiltz and her colleagues considered a total of 251 items obtained from more than 60 existing questionnaires, such as the BASFI (Bath Ankylosing Spondylitis Functional Index), the Dougados Functional Index, and the AS Quality of Life Questionnaire.
The investigators then conducted an international, cross-sectional study involving 1,915 patients with AS (mean age, 51 years). In this second phase, they sent a postal survey to patients to ask about various parameters. An expert committee then assessed the results in the third phase and selected 50 items for possible inclusion in the final model. The penultimate stage in the development process involved sending a second postal survey to 628 patients with AS (mean age, 48.5 years).
In the final stage, an expert consensus meeting was held in which the final 17-item tool was agreed upon (Ann. Rheum. Dis. 2013;72:124).
"ASAS HI is a new composite index that captures relevant information on the health status of patients with AS," Dr. Kiltz said. "It is the first disease-specific index which is based on the ICF, and the items represent a whole range of abilities as defined by the ICF."
ASAS HI could eventually be used in clinical trials and clinical practice as a new composite index that captures relevant information on the health status of patients, Dr. Kiltz suggested.
"We are now doing a field test to test the 17 items in a wider range of patients," she said. After this is completed, the specifics of the tool will be published.
Dr. Kiltz had no conflicts of interest.
AT THE EULAR CONGRESS 2013