Further validation and responsiveness assessment of the Herpes Outbreak Impact Questionnaire and Herpes Symptom Checklist.

Value Health

Galen Research, Enterprise House, Manchester Science Park, Lloyd Street North Manchester, UK.

Published: September 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • The Herpes Outbreak Impact Questionnaire (HOIQ) and Herpes Symptom Checklist (HSC) were successfully validated for Australian patients based on their responses in a clinical trial.
  • The questionnaires were adapted into Australian English and showed good internal consistency and stability over time, with strong correlations between the two scales.
  • Both scales effectively distinguished the presence or absence of outbreak healing and symptom severity, indicating they are reliable and suitable for clinical studies.

Article Abstract

Objective: The Herpes Outbreak Impact Questionnaire (HOIQ) and Herpes Symptom Checklist (HSC) are patient-completed questionnaires for assessing genital herpes outbreaks. This report describes the validation of paper-and-pencil versions of the scales and responsiveness assessments in an Australian clinical trial.

Methods: Acceptability of the language of the original UK versions was tested with Australians. The HOIQ and HSC were then field-tested with patients. The new versions were validated using patients' daily responses to the questionnaires in a famciclovir study.

Results: The HOIQ and HSC were readily adapted into Australian English and were acceptable to patients. Psychometric sample: N = 151; 81 (54%) male; mean age 39.9 +/- 11.6 years; mean outbreaks 5.1 +/- 3.0 per year. Internal consistency was good (alphas at outbreak 1 ranged 0.84-0.90 HOIQ and 0.73-0.87 HSC). Rasch analysis showed item stability over time. Correlations between HOIQ and HSC ranged from 0.46 to 0.60. Both scales distinguished outbreak healing presence or absence at day 6 (P = 0.001), and the HOIQ scale distinguished between symptom severity groups (P < 0.001). Scale scores declined significantly over study duration, exhibiting large effect sizes.

Conclusions: The paper-and-pencil HOIQ and HSC were reliable, valid, and responsive in a clinical trial setting. These instruments are recommended for use in clinical studies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1524-4733.2008.00450.xDOI Listing

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Similar Publications

Further validation and responsiveness assessment of the Herpes Outbreak Impact Questionnaire and Herpes Symptom Checklist.

Value Health

September 2010

Galen Research, Enterprise House, Manchester Science Park, Lloyd Street North Manchester, UK.

Article Synopsis
  • The Herpes Outbreak Impact Questionnaire (HOIQ) and Herpes Symptom Checklist (HSC) were successfully validated for Australian patients based on their responses in a clinical trial.
  • The questionnaires were adapted into Australian English and showed good internal consistency and stability over time, with strong correlations between the two scales.
  • Both scales effectively distinguished the presence or absence of outbreak healing and symptom severity, indicating they are reliable and suitable for clinical studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To develop measures of the day-to-day symptomatic and functional impact of recurrent genital herpes (RGH) outbreaks. The Herpes Outbreak Impact Questionnaire (HOIQ) and the Herpes Symptom Checklist (HSC) were designed to be acceptable to clinical professionals and to reflect patients' experience.

Methods: Scale content was derived via literature review and interviews with RGH patients and physicians.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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