Abstract
Background. Patient-reported outcomes such as health-related quality of life (HRQOL) are increasingly used as primary endpoints in clinical trials. The Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ (PedsQL™) is widely used as a measure of HRQOL and may be a particularly suitable primary outcome in pediatric asthma clinical trials. Objectives. To examine the reliability, validity, and responsiveness to clinical change of the PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales and PedsQL™ Asthma Module Asthma Symptoms Scale in a sample of vulnerable children with persistent asthma recruited from Federally Qualified Health Centers. Methods. Children (N = 252; ages 3 to 14 years) with persistent asthma (27% mild, 40.9% moderate, 32.1% severe) and their parents (93.7% mother, 83.3% Hispanic, 76.9% Spanish-speaking, 72.6% less than a high school diploma) enrolled in a clinical trial completed the PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales, the PedsQL™ 3.0 Asthma Module Asthma Symptoms Scale, and a measure of asthma symptom frequency (used as an indicator of clinical change) at baseline and 3-month follow-up. Results. The PedsQL™ demonstrated adequate internal consistency reliability and convergent and discriminative validity. Based on intra- and intersubject change, effect sizes, and standard errors of measurement, the PedsQL™ demonstrated responsiveness to clinical change. Conclusions. For both child self-report and parent proxy-report, the PedsQL™ Generic Core Scales Total Scale score and the PedsQL™ Asthma Symptoms Scale are suitable for use as primary asthma clinical trial outcomes.
Acknowledgments
This research was supported by grant R40MC01214 from the Bureau of Maternal and Child Health, U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration.