Multicentre validation of a patient-reported outcome measure for functional movement disorders 2026 Michaelis et al

Andy

Senior Member (Voting rights)

Abstract​

Background No disorder-specific patient-reported outcome measure (PROM) has yet been validated for functional movement disorders (FMDs), leaving a critical gap in clinical care and research.

Objective To validate the FMD questionnaire (FMDQ) in a prospectively recruited sample through a multicentre study.

Methods Confirmatory factorial analysis (CFA) tested the assumed structure of the questionnaire with factors reflecting severity of motor symptoms, impairment of everyday activities, impact of non-motor symptoms and impairment of social functioning. Internal consistency and floor/ceiling effects were examined. The 36-item short form health survey (SF-36), patient health questionnaire-15 (PHQ-15), the fatigue assessment scale (FAS) and a clinician-rated scale corresponding to motor symptom items of the FMDQ (FMDQ-CR) were used to test criterion and construct validity. The minimally clinically important difference (MCID) was assessed through distribution-based and anchor-based methods in a convenience sample of patients with follow-up assessments.

Results Complete datasets from 157 patients were analysed; follow-up assessments were available from 30 patients. CFA confirmed that a four-factor model provides a better fit to the data compared with a more restrictive one-factor model. Internal consistency was appropriate for all factors/subscales. No floor or ceiling effects were detected. Criterion and content validity were supported by significant correlations with respective SF-36 subscores, PHQ-15, FAS and FMDQ-CR. Anchor-based MCID was estimated at 8 to 20 points, with the central value aligning with the distribution-based MCID of 12 points (8% of the total score range).

Conclusions The FMDQ is a psychometrically robust PROM, making it a useful tool for clinical practice and treatment trials.

Open access
 
The 36-item short form health survey (SF-36), patient health questionnaire-15 (PHQ-15), the fatigue assessment scale (FAS) and a clinician-rated scale corresponding to motor symptom items of the FMDQ (FMDQ-CR) were used to test criterion and construct validity.
«Our arbitrary scale matches other arbitrary scales so our scale has good validity.»

I wonder if they will ever learn..
 
«Our arbitrary scale matches other arbitrary scales so our scale has good validity.»

I wonder if they will ever learn..
Hey, if I'm proper drunk and I tell you that's 3 fingers, and you're proper drunk too and tell me the nice-but-a-bit-blurry officer is holding 4 fingers, clearly we are both correct and either there are 3.5 fingers, or we discovered quantum digital theory. Either way it's back to the pub for some more evidence-based evidence-gathering.
 
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