Examining fatigue in COPD: development, validity and reliability of a modified version of FACIT-F scale

Khaled Al-shair, Hana Muellerova, Janelle Yorke, Stephen I. Rennard, Emiel F M Wouters, Nicola A. Hanania, Amir Sharafkhaneh, Jørgen Vestbo, Jorgen Vestbo

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Introduction: Fatigue is a disruptive symptom that inhibits normal functional performance of COPD patients in daily activities. The availability of a short, simple, reliable and valid scale would improve assessment of the characteristics and influence of fatigue in COPD.Methods: At baseline, 2107 COPD patients from the ECLIPSE cohort completed the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy Fatigue (FACIT-F) scale. We used well-structured classic method, the principal components analysis (PCA) and Rasch analysis for structurally examining the 13-item FACIT-F.Results: Four items were less able to capture fatigue characteristics in COPD and were deleted. PCA was applied to the remaining 9 items of the modified FACIT-F and resulted in three interpretable dimensions: i) general (5 items); ii) functional ability (2 items); and iii) psychosocial fatigue (2 items). The modified FACIT-F had high internal consistency (Cronbach's α = 0.91) and it did not fit a uni-dimensional Rasch model, confirming the prior output from the PCA. The correlations between total score and each dimension were ≥ 0.64 and within dimensions ≥0.43 (p <0.001 for all).The original and modified FACIT-F had significant convergent validity; its scores were associated with SGRQ total score (0.69 and 0.7) and mMRC dyspnoea scores (0.48 and 0.47), (p =
    Original languageEnglish
    Article number100
    JournalHealth and Quality of Life Outcomes
    Volume10
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 23 Aug 2012

    Keywords

    • Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
    • Exercise capacity
    • Fatigue
    • Health status

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