Open Access
Validation of a self‐completed Dystonia Non‐Motor Symptoms Questionnaire
Author(s) -
Klingelhoefer Lisa,
Chaudhuri Kallol R.,
Kamm Christoph,
MartinezMartin Pablo,
Bhatia Kailash,
Sauerbier Anna,
Kaiser Maximilian,
RodriguezBlazquez Carmen,
Balint Bettina,
Untucht Robert,
Hall Lynsey J.,
Mildenstein Lauritz,
Wienecke Miriam,
Martino Davide,
Gregor Olaf,
Storch Alexander,
Reichmann Heinz
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
annals of clinical and translational neurology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.824
H-Index - 42
ISSN - 2328-9503
DOI - 10.1002/acn3.50900
Subject(s) - medicine , interquartile range , quality of life (healthcare) , physical therapy , cervical dystonia , dystonia , psychiatry , nursing
Abstract Objective To develop and validate a novel 14‐item self‐completed questionnaire (in English and German) enquiring about the presence of non‐motor symptoms (NMS) during the past month in patients with craniocervical dystonia in an international multicenter study. Methods The Dystonia Non‐Motor Symptoms Questionnaire (DNMSQuest) covers seven domains including sleep, autonomic symptoms, fatigue, emotional well‐being, stigma, activities of daily living, sensory symptoms. The feasibility and clinimetric attributes were analyzed. Results Data from 194 patients with CD (65.6% female, mean age 58.96 ± 12.17 years, duration of disease 11.95 ± 9.40 years) and 102 age‐ and sex‐matched healthy controls (66.7% female, mean age 55.67 ± 17.62 years) were collected from centres in Germany and the UK. The median total NMS score in CD patients was 5 (interquartile range 3–7), significantly higher than in healthy controls with 1 (interquartile range 0.75–2.25) ( P < 0.001, Mann–Whitney U ‐test). Evidence for intercorrelation and convergent validity is shown by moderate to high correlations of total DNMSQuest score with motor symptom severity (TWSTRS: r s = 0.61), clinical global impression ( r s = 0.40), and health‐related quality of life measures: CDQ‐24 ( r s = 0.74), EQ‐5D index ( r s = −0.59), and scale ( r s = −0.49) (all P < 0.001). Data quality and acceptability was very satisfactory. Interpretation The DNMSQuest, a patient self‐completed questionnaire for NMS assessment in CD patients, appears robust, reproducible, and valid in clinical practice showing a tangible impact of NMS on quality of life in CD. As there is no specific, comprehensive, validated tool to assess the burden of NMS in dystonia, the DNMSQuest can bridge this gap and could easily be integrated into clinical practice.