Session Information
Session Type: ACR Concurrent Abstract Session
Session Time: 2:30PM-4:00PM
Background/Purpose: The importance of patient-reported outcomes is increasingly recognized both in clinical care and in research. PROMIS is an NIH-supported collection of patient-reported outcome measures, covering a variety of domains that are designed without disease specificity. While ‘short forms’ have been studied in juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), PROMIS computer adaptive tests (CATs) have not. This study evaluates whether PROMIS CATs correlate with disease activity in patients with JIA.
Methods: A convenience sample of patients with JIA (N = 21) were recruited from a single center. Patients aged 10-17 years completed all available pediatric PROMIS CATs, and parents of patients aged 2-9 years completed all available parent proxy PROMIS CATs (fatigue, pain interference, peer relations, anxiety, depressive symptoms, and mobility). Correlation of the CATs t-scores with disease activity, as measured by the Juvenile Disease Activity Score-71 (JADAS-71), (0-101, higher being worse) was evaluated using Spearman correlation coefficients.
Results: All families approached completed the PROMIS CATs: 13 patients and 8 parents (Table 1). Median age was 12.7 years (range 1.3 – 18.6 years), and mean JADAS-71 score was 9.58 (SD 2.07). 69% of patients completed PROMIS CATs remotely via smartphone. Anxiety (r = 0.74, p = 0.006), depressive symptoms (r = 0.84, p < 0.001), and pain interference (r = 0.64, p = 0.018) CATs correlated strongly with JIA disease activity (Table 2). Among parent proxy CATs, only anxiety correlated with disease activity (r = 0.71); however the association was not statistically significant.
Conclusion: Our results demonstrate that the PROMIS CATs are feasible to administer in an outpatient pediatric rheumatology setting. Anxiety, depressive symptoms, and pain interference were significantly correlated with disease activity, even though mean disease activity was relatively low. This underscores the negative effect on quality of life of even mild disease. Parent proxy CATs showed poor correlations with disease activity, suggesting parents are inaccurate in assessing important aspects of their child’s health. Larger prospective studies are needed to evaluate the sensitivity of PROMIS CATS to change in disease activity over time.
Table 1. Patient characteristics
Characteristic |
N=26 patients |
Age, years, median [interquartile range] |
12.7 [6.0, 14.5] |
Sex |
|
Male |
8 (30.8%) |
Female |
18 (69.2%) |
Race |
|
White or Caucasian |
20 (76.9%) |
Black or African American |
1 (3.9%) |
American Indian or Alaska Native |
1 (3.9%) |
Asian |
4 (15.4%) |
Ethnicity |
|
Hispanic |
4 (15.4%) |
Non-hispanic |
22 (84.6%) |
Insurance |
|
Medicaid |
6 (23.1%) |
Private insurance |
20 (76.9%) |
Device |
|
Smartphone |
18 (69.2%) |
iPad |
3 (11.5%) |
Computer |
5 (19.2%) |
Location |
|
In hospital |
8 (30.8%) |
Remotely |
18 (69.2%) |
Table 2. Spearman correlation coefficients for PROMIS domains and JADAS71 score
PROMIS domain |
JADAS71 score Spearman correlation coefficient |
p-value |
PATIENT SCORES |
|
|
Fatigue T-score |
0.488 |
0.090 |
Pain Interference T-score |
0.640 |
0.018 |
Peer Relations T-score |
-0.345 |
0.248 |
Anxiety T-score |
0.738 |
0.006 |
Depressive Symptoms T-score |
0.840 |
<0.001 |
Mobility T-score |
-0.671 |
0.017 |
PARENT PROXY SCORES |
|
|
Fatigue T-score |
-0.024 |
0.955 |
Pain Interference T-score |
0.048 |
0.911 |
Peer Relations T-score |
0.037 |
0.937 |
Anxiety T-score |
0.714 |
0.071 |
Depressive Symptoms T-score |
0.074 |
0.875 |
Mobility T-score |
-0.464 |
0.294 |
To cite this abstract in AMA style:
Trachtman R, Murray ET, Szymonifka J, Adams A, Pan N, Taber S, Lehman TJA, Onel K, Mandl LA. Do Patient Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS) Computer Adaptive Tests Correlate with Disease Activity in Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis? [abstract]. Arthritis Rheumatol. 2017; 69 (suppl 10). https://acrabstracts.org/abstract/do-patient-reported-outcome-measurement-information-system-promis-computer-adaptive-tests-correlate-with-disease-activity-in-juvenile-idiopathic-arthritis/. Accessed .« Back to 2017 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting
ACR Meeting Abstracts - https://acrabstracts.org/abstract/do-patient-reported-outcome-measurement-information-system-promis-computer-adaptive-tests-correlate-with-disease-activity-in-juvenile-idiopathic-arthritis/