Skip to main content

Psychometric properties of the portuguese version of the chronic urticaria quality of life questionnaire (CU-Q2oL)

Abstract

Background

Chronic urticaria is defined as the appearance of urticarial lesions and/or angioedema during a period of more than six weeks. We aimed at developing the Portuguese version of the Chronic Urticaria Quality of Life Questionnaire (CU-Q2oL) and at testing its reliability and the content, construct and criterion validity.

Methods

The forward-backward approach to a linguistic equivalence was followed, after which a clinical review and a cognitive debriefing with patients were performed. The intraclass correlation coefficient checked test-retest reliability with patients filling the same questionnaire with one week apart and the Cronbach’s alpha indicator assessed the internal consistency. Construct validity was tested by an exploratory factor analysis and by hypothesis tests involving sociodemographic and clinical patient characteristics, including the urticaria control test (UCT). On the other hand, criterion validity was tested through correlations with the Short-Form Health Survey SF-36, EQ-5D-5 L, and the Dermatology Quality of Life Index (DLQI).

Results

A total of 162 patients from seven hospital units were included. The mean (standard deviation) age was 42.6 (13.3) and 81.6% were female. CU-Q2oL was entirely filled by all respondents. Internal consistency was 0.947 for the overall score, ranging from 0.661 (limits) to 0.899 (sleep problems) and the corresponding reproducibility indicator was 0.910, based on 23 patients and ranging from 0.711 (swelling) and 0.957 (looks). Exploratory factor analysis in general confirmed the original structure originally obtained by the authors. All CU-Q2oL dimensions were highly correlated with DLQI Index and differentiated well between males and females, and between different levels of wheals and pruritus. In addition, moderate negative correlations were found between Cu-Q2oL scores and the dimensions from SF-36 and EQ-5D-5 L.

Conclusions

The satisfactory metric properties confirmed the cultural adaptation and validity of CU-Q2oL into Portuguese population, providing the clinicians with a valid tool to evaluate the impact of chronic urticaria on patient’s QoL and therefore adjust their treatment.

Trial registration number

Not applicable.

Background

Every chronic illness produces a significant impact on patients’ life, affecting both physical and psychosocial domains. Chronic urticaria (CU) can be defined as the appearance of urticarial lesions (wheals) and/or angioedema during a period of more than six weeks [1,2,3,4,5]. There are major problems regarding etiology, pathogenic mechanisms and pharmacological treatment of CU and its management ultimately aims at preserving the well-being and the quality of life of patients.

In fact, chronic urticaria can lead to changes in sleep patterns, daytime sleepiness, ability to concentrate, altered perception of self-image, social isolation, psychological changes and even anxiety and depression [6]. It also yields relevant direct and indirect costs, including drugs, medical appointments, emergency visits, hospitalization, absenteeism and presenteeism [7].

Few studies had addressed quality of life (QoL) in patients with chronic urticaria until 2005, when Baiardini et al. created the Chronic Urticaria Quality of Life Questionnaire (CU-Q2oL) [1], an Italian measure specifically designed for CU patients to express their perspectives. Until then the QoL of patients with CU was only measured through generic health status instruments such as the Short-Form Health Survey SF-36 [8] or the Nottingham Health Profile [9].

Although generic instruments can be used in all diseases and populations, enabling an easier comparison of the impact of health states associated with various clinical conditions, they do not measure the precise burden of a particular disease, and they may not be enough sensitive to changes in health status. Specific instruments, on the other hand, are more sensitive to small differences in health and changes overtime, showing higher face validity, thus better supporting therapeutic decisions. For instance, the dimension ‘looks’ is never addressed by generic instruments, in spite of being very meaningful for patients with chronic urticaria. Therefore, the cultural adaptation of the CU-Q2oL to the Portuguese reality was somehow urgent in order to know the effective impact of CU in patients and therefore allow providers and researchers to compare their results with those obtained in different countries and to participate in international studies.

There are no specific data for Portugal regarding the incidence and/or prevalence of chronic urticaria but, based on international data, it is estimated that CU affects up to 1% of the Portuguese population at any given time. Two thirds represent forms of chronic spontaneous urticaria [6, 10, 11], which can have a high impact on consumption of healthcare resources and direct and indirect costs. According to the single study concerning costs in Portugal, which is on agreement with international data, the average cost to treat a patient with severe chronic spontaneous urticaria is estimated to be 6234€ over five years, of which 4220€ correspond to National Health Service direct costs and the remaining 2014€ to out-of-pocket indirect costs [12]. A systematic implementation of a valid and reliable measure of quality of life may alert doctors and patients to a timely approach to the impact of the situation.

The aim of this study was to create a valid and reliable questionnaire in European Portuguese from the original CU-Q2oL, to measure the quality of life and the burden experienced by individuals with chronic urticaria. For this purpose, we (i) linguistically and culturally adapted the CU-Q2oL from Italian to Portuguese; (ii) assessed reliability, validity, interpretability and acceptance of the Portuguese version; and (iii) estimated the health-related quality life of a sample of patients with chronic urticaria.

Methods

Linguistic and cultural adaptation

We followed the internationally defined methodology for the linguistic and cultural adaptation for the validation of outcome measures, as well as the author’s methodological proposal. Therefore, after the authors’ permission for the creation of a Portuguese version of the CU-Q2oL, we started with the translation of the Italian version to Portuguese and followed the recommendations proposed by the COSMIN checklist [13] and by the sequential approach [14].

This phase included the elaboration of two local independent versions from two experienced bilingual Portuguese translators who, based on the original Italian questionnaire preformed forward translations into Portuguese. Both translations were merged in a reconciled version drawn up between the translators and the study team. Another local translator, bilingual Italian native speaker, a researcher in the University of Coimbra, who did not have any access to the original Italian version of the questionnaire, then back translated this merged version. This back-translation was finally compared with the original version to guarantee a semantic equivalence.

We also asked a clinician to perform a scientific review of the final translation. This allergy hospital specialist was asked to look at both versions and comment. Three alternatives of answers were given to her: (i) if happy with the translation, it was only required to use a check sign to say it in the “comments section”; (ii) if terms should have substantial corrections to add, she should give a new proposal in the section “suggestions proposed”; and (iii) if assumed that there is more than one correct form to translate the sentence, she should include her suggestion on the section “possible alternative for further cognitive test”.

Next, we ran a cognitive debriefing meeting with 10 chronic urticarial patients. Our aim was to detect whether the Portuguese version we had was acceptable by patients and whether its contents was understandable, no ambiguous, no redundant and easy to fill. This sample of actual patients approximately respected the age-gender distribution of the target patient group, with only one exception: we forced to have patients from the lowest possible education level, as we assumed that if interpretation problems didn’t occur with this type of patients they won’t occur with patients with higher education level.

At this phase, our main goal was to obtain a conceptual and linguistic version, equivalent to the Italian original. That is, a Portuguese version where the items would have the same meaning and content as the corresponding items in the original version.

Study design

This was an observational multicenter study aimed at validating a diagnostic scale and analyzing the health-related quality of life of a sample of patients. Dermatologists and imuno allergologists from seven dermatology and imuno-allergology departments of four Portuguese public hospitals from the areas of Lisbon, Coimbra and Oporto conducted the study during regular medical appointments. The National Data Protection Agency and the Ethics Committees of all hospitals approved the study and all participants gave their informed consent after previous information about the objective of this study, its benefits, potential risks and possible discomfort. There was, under no circumstances, any interference with the health professional decision regarding the best-suited medical approach to each patient.

Participants

We included consecutive patients from the different units who (i) had at least 18 years of age, (ii) suffered from chronic urticaria for at least six months, (iii) had capacity to give consent to participate in the study, and (iv) knew how to read, write and understand Portuguese. Excluded were (i) unstable patients or with uncontrolled symptoms and perceived by clinicians as not having ability to fill the measures, (ii) cognitively affected patients, or (iii) who did not understand Portuguese.

After data collection, the information was registered in a digital device without any identification of patients. Data was analyzed and hypotheses were tested in order to demonstrate the reliability and validity of the Portuguese version of the CU-Q2oL.

Measurement instruments

In this study, health-related quality of life was measured through specific and generic instruments. Specific instruments included the Portuguese version of the CU-Q2oL and the Dermatology Quality of Life Index (DLQI). Among the generic instruments we selected the generic health status measure SF-36 and the health preference quality of life EQ-5D-5 L. Sociodemographic and clinic data were also collected, including the measurement of the severity of the urticaria and its control by the Urticaria Control Test (UCT).

  • CU-Q2oL is the first disease-specific instrument designed to measure the quality of life of patients with chronic urticaria [1]. The authors of the initial Italian version had the goal to create a self-administered, easy and fast answering measurement instrument to be filled without any assistance and to be able to capture the physical, psychosocial and practical aspects relevant to patients with chronic urticaria [ 1]. It was initially created by professionals and patients and consisted of 37 items with a recall period of two weeks; the items emerged from experts and researchers in immunology, dermatology and immuno-allergology, as well as a panel of 60 patients affected by CU. It was later reduced to 23 items corresponding to an overall impairment score and six dimensions: pruritus, swelling, impact on life activities, sleep problems, limits, and looks, as follows:

Pruritus

Sleep problems

Looks

1 pruritus

11 ease of falling asleep

19 medication adverse effects

2 wheals

12 walking up during the night

20 bothersome

Swelling

13 daytime tiredness

21 embarrassing in public

3 eyes swelling

14 ability to concentrate

22 use of cosmetics

4 lips swelling

15 nervousness

23 choice of clothes

Impact on life activities

Limits

5 work

16 bad mood

6 physical activities

17 limits in choosing food

7 quality of sleep

18 sport

8 free time

9 social relations

10 eating

Answering the questionnaire, patients express how troubled they are, by scoring each item on a 5-point Likert-type scale from 0 (not at all) to 4 (extremely). For each dimension, the corresponding items are summed to obtain a score, which is converted to a scale from 0 to 100 through a linear transformation. Similar procedure is applied to an overall score. Higher values always correspond to higher QoL impairment, which means worse QoL [1].

In its original version, this measure showed good values of convergent validity with SF-36, internal consistency with Cronbach alpha scores between 0.65 and 0.83, reliability with good Intraclass Correlation Coefficient (ICC) for four items and greater or equal to 0.75 for the other items and that is, standards of quality that ensure a good measuring tool to evaluate the burden in chronic urticaria patients. It has been translated and adapted in several languages, such as Brazilian-Portuguese [15], German [16], Greek [17], Israeri [18], Persian [19], Polish [20], Spanish [21], Thai [22], and Turkish [23].

  • DLQI is a dermatology-specific questionnaire with 10 items [24] and assesses six different aspects that may affect the patients’ QoL: symptoms and feelings, daily activities, leisure activities, work or school, personal relationships, and treatment. Higher scores indicate a greater impairment in QoL [24]. Each of the 10 questions is scored from 0 (not at all) to 3 (very much) and the overall DLQI score is calculated by summing up the scores from each question, resulting in a numeric score between 0 and 30. Higher scores indicate a greater impairment in QoL. The impact of the DLQI scores on a patient’s life is as follows: 0 to 1 = no effect; 2 to 5 = small effect; 6 to 10 = moderate effect; 11 to 20 = very large effect; 21 to 30 = extremely large effect.

  • SF-36, with its 36 items, measures eight major health dimensions, all of them on a scale of 0–100, with the extreme anchors corresponding, respectively, to death and perfect health status [25, 26]. The effectiveness dimensions are physical function, role limitations due to physical or emotional problems, intensity and discomfort caused by pain, general health, vitality, social function, and mental health. Higher scores mean a better perceived health status.

  • EQ-5D-5 L is a generic QoL instrument consisting of five dimensions of health (mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort, and anxiety/depression) and a visual analogue scale (VAS) for rating health on the precise day. Weighted scoring produces an EQ-5D-5 L index score [27]. The EuroQoL Group has approved the Portuguese version as well as the corresponding value set [28].

  • UCT is a patient-reported outcome instrument to retrospectively assess urticaria control [29]. Each item has five answer options (scored with 0 to 4 points). Low scores indicate high disease activity and low disease control. Accordingly, the minimum and maximum UCT scores are, respectively, 0 and 16, with 16 points indicating complete disease control.

The order of administration for the instruments was the following: first, we asked patients for clinical information regarding his/her chronic urticaria, before addressing their assessment of the urticaria control (UCT); next, we applied the preference quality of life measure EQ-5D-5 L, followed by the DLQI, the CU-Q2oL and the SF-36; at last, we asked for sociodemographic variables.

Reliability

To address the reliability, we tested the intertemporal stability and the internal consistency. The former was tested using the ICC in a 1-week test-retest design with no clinical intervention during this week. A score smaller that 0.5 is considered weak, between 0.5 and 0.75 moderate, between 0.75 and 0.9 good, and larger than 0.9 excellent [30].

On the other hand, the internal consistency, representing the homogeneity among the individual items, was tested using the Cronbach’s alpha coefficient, which should have scores between 0.7 and 0.9 [31].

The following two hypotheses were formulated:

H1: The Portuguese version of the CU-Q2oL shows good internal consistency.

H2: The Portuguese version of the CU-Q2oL shows good intertemporal stability.

Validity

For a measure to be precise, it is essential that it measures/evaluates what it is supposed to measure. In what concerns the validity tests, we addressed the three strands of content, construct, and criterion [31, 32]. The content validity, measuring the relevance of the items, has already been tested through the cognitive interviews of 10 patients and with the reviews performed by clinicians during the linguistic and cultural adaptation phase.

The construct validity addresses the ability of the instrument to measure theoretical concepts. Following some authors [31, 32], we used the two major ways to test the construct validity: structural validity and hypothesis testing. The structural validity was tested by using exploratory factor analyses. Hypotheses testing assumes the formulation of several hypotheses with known groups stratified by sociodemographic variables (sex, age, family status, employment status and education level) and some clinical variables (disease duration, angioedema, type and severity of urticaria, comorbidities, type of treatment, and control of urticaria). Student t-test and ANOVA were used to test the CU-Q2oL scores differences on these known groups.

The following three hypotheses were formulated:

H3: Exploratory factor analysis replicates the original structure of CU-Q2oL.

H4: CU-Q2oL is able to discriminate based on sociodemographic variables.

H5: CU-Q2oL is able to discriminate based on clinical variables.

To test the criterion validity we used bivariate statistical analyses (Pearson’s r correlation coefficients) between the dimensions of the Portuguese version of the CU-Q2oL and other measuring instruments. Correlations less than 0.3, between 0.3 and 0.5, and higher than 0.5 were defined as weak, moderate and strong, respectively [33].

These other instruments included the generic health status instrument SF-36, the generic quality of life instrument EuroQoL EQ-5D-5 L and the dermatology-specific instrument DLQI. We expected to evidence the similarities and differences between measured concepts.

The following three hypotheses were formulated:

H6: CU-Q2oL dimensions are correlated with the SF-36 dimensions.

H7: CU-Q2oL dimensions are correlated with the EQ-5D-5 L.

H8: CU-Q2oL dimensions are correlated with the DLQI dimensions.

Taking into account that SF-36 is a generic health status measure, a priori we do not expect to have large correlations with CU-Q2oL. On the other hand, some significant correlations are expected with both EQ-5D-5 L index and VAS. Finally, because DLQI is a dermatology-specific questionnaire we expect to have large correlations with CU-Q2oL.

Statistical analysis

Floor and ceiling effects were checked on overall CU-Q2ol score and dimensions. These effects exist whenever more than 15% of the respondents lie, respectively, in the lowest and the highest possible score [31, 32].

Results

Linguistic and cultural adaptation

During the forward-backward process, no major differences were found and, due to the layout of this questionnaire, some minor changes were produced in the Portuguese version after the comparison between the backward version and the original. Clinical review also yielded to minor changes in the Portuguese version. On the other hand, on the cognitive debriefing meeting, no understandability, ambiguity or redundancy errors were mentioned. Only the wording of some questions had to be changed in order to have a more colloquial questions. At the end of this process, a complete report was send to and approved by the authors of CU-Q2oL.

Sample and reliability

A total of 162 patients from seven units were included in this study. Table 1 presents the main sociodemographic and clinical characteristics.

Table 1 Sample demographic and clinic characteristics (n = 162)

Mean (standard deviation) age was 42.6 (13.3), 81.6% were female, 63.1% were married, 70.1% were employed, and almost 35% had 5 to 9 years of education. These patients suffered from the disease in average for the last 5.6 years (median of 3 years). The main diagnosis was chronic spontaneous urticaria (83.3%) and the most frequent comorbidities were allergic rhinitis (26.5%), drug allergies (19.8%), and thyroid disorders (17.3%). A total of 81.5% of patients received antihistamines and 22.8% were on omalizumab.

Table 2 shows the distribution of the scores of CU-Q2oL overall and dimensions’ scores, as well as reliability indicators.

Table 2 Distribution and reliability scores for CU-Q2oL

As presented in this table, pruritus has the highest score and no CU-Q2oL dimension showed ceiling effect. However, some dimensions showed important floor effect (e.g., limits and looks), possibly justified by taking into account the sample characteristics. Internal consistency of the overall score (H1) was very good (0.947), with a small exception for the dimension ‘limits’ (0.661), and ICC showed a high reproducibility power, with a ICC for the overall score equal to 0.910, ranging from 0.711 (swelling) and 0.957 (looks) across dimensions.

Validity

Starting by the construct validity, in our case, to test the structural validity, we opt by performing the exploratory factor analysis with all the 23 items of the Cu-Q2oL. Using a principal component analysis with Varimax rotation with Kaiser normalization, we selected five factors, corresponding to 73.2% of variance explained. Table 3 presents the major results from this factor analysis.

Table 3 Results from exploratory factor analysis on CU-Q2oL data

Looking at the contents of these factors, we observed that the original two factors ‘pruritus’ and ‘swelling’ appeared merged in one sole factor, and ‘sleep problems’ original factor maintains in this new structure. Regarding the ‘impact on life activities’ factor, two items did not show together with the original ones, but with an acceptable rationale. They were the item 7 (quality of sleep) which followed the other items of the ‘sleep’ factor, as well as item 16 (bad mood), and the item 10 (eating) that appeared in the new factor ‘limits’ together with the item 17 (limits in choosing food) and the item 23 (choice of clothes). The remaining items formed the ‘looks’ factor also with item 18 (sport). At last, item 22 (use of cosmetics) appeared in the domain ‘impact on life activities’ instead of in the domain ‘looks’ (H3).

Another way to test the construct validity is to address the discriminative validations by looking at sociodemographic and clinical variables. Table 4 shows the different CU-Q2oL average scores for different sociodemographic and clinical variables.

Table 4 QoL perception for different levels of sociodemographic and clinical variables

Regarding the sociodemographic variables and analyzing hypothesis H4, in general, CU-Q2oL differentiated well between males and females, with females always having higher QoL impairment. However, it was not able to discriminate based on age or education.

On the other hand, in what concerns clinical variables and hypothesis H5, this measurement instrument also differentiated well between different levels of severity of pruritus and wheals, with most severe cases scored as poor health. In addition, the presence of angioedema and a poor urticarial control were perceived as higher QoL impairment.

At last, Table 5 presents the correlations between CU-Q2oL overall and dimensions scores and the measurement of health status (SF-36), quality of life (EQ-5D-5 L), and a dermatology-specific questionnaire (DLQI).

Table 5 Correlation between QoL perception and the measures SF-26, EQ-5D-5 L and DLQI

As expected, looking at the correlations between CU-Q2oL and SF-36 dimensions (hypothesis H6), we notice moderate negative correlations, especially for the overall CU-Q2oL scores, for the ‘impact on life activities’ and ‘limits’ dimensions (SF-36 physical dimensions) and for ‘sleep problems’ dimension (SF-36 mental dimensions). In addition, when CU-Q2oL dimensions are correlated with both EQ-5D-5 L index and VAS (hypothesis H7), we showed moderate and large correlation, especially with the overall CU-Q2oL and with ‘impact on life activities’ dimension. At last, all CU-Q2oL dimensions are highly correlated with DLQI index (H8).

Discussion

Cu-Q2oL is the first disease-specific measurement instrument to address the impact of chronic urticaria on QoL. To create the Portuguese version we have followed strict methodologies based on forward-backward translations, with content, construct and criterion validity, as well as reliability tests.

The sample used to validate this version was formed by 162 chronic urticaria patients from seven centers dealing with urticaria patients from the main regions of Portugal, assuring good country coverage. Among them, 23 patients participated in a test stability over time. The sample with a mean age of 42.6 and female predominance reflects the characteristics of the population attending the chronic urticaria clinics, including in Portugal [34, 35]. All patients considered the Portuguese version understandable and without ambiguity.

Excellent reliability scores were found when performing the internal consistency and when over time stability was tested, even a little bit better than in other countries [15, 16, 20,21,22,23]. Some variability may be accepted due to the frequent changing of the disease activity over days/weeks and, consequently, with some variability in the interference on some aspects of the QoL.

Exploratory factor analysis revealed a very similar structure comparable with the one presented by the authors on its original version and explaining 73.2% of the variance. The major discrepancy between the Italian and the Portuguese CU-Q2oL factor structures resides on the fact that ‘pruritus’ and ‘swelling’ domains did not appear as two individual domains, encompassing a ‘symptoms’ domain. However, when comparing the structure proposed by the original authors and by the various countries’ culturally adapted versions, we also evidence some differences. In fact, while the Spanish [21] and the Turkish [23] versions retain the original scales, the German [16], the Greek [17], the Hebrew [18] and the Polish [20] versions show new six-scale structures, including dimensions as ‘functioning’ and ‘mental status’. Brazilian [15] version determined a three-scale structure formed by ‘sleep/mental status/eating’, ‘pruritus/impact on life activities’, and ‘swelling/limits/look’.”

Construct validity known-groups tests also revealed the power of CU-Q2oL to be able to discriminate patients based on sociodemographic, namely with a higher impact on QoL in the female population which is usually described in other studies [1, 15, 16, 20, 22, 23], and certainly has to do with higher levels of pruritus and angioedema reported in this group of females (respectively 42.5 and 17.8, compared to 33.6 and 8.2 in males).

The item ‘looks’, encompasses particularly embarrassing situations in public, use of cosmetics and choice of clothes, has shown to have a more significant impact on women and may have contributed significantly for the difference of the burden of CU between genders. In addition, when evaluated by another instrument, the DLQI, the impact of chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU), as well as psoriasis and other chronic skin diseases is also significantly higher in females.

Clinical variables associated with more severe disease were clearly correlated with a higher score in CU-Q2oL. Severity of pruritus and the number of wheals in the previous week, which together constitute one of the scores more frequently used to asses disease severity in Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria (CSU) (the UAS7 – urticaria activity score 7), as well as angioedema with unpredictable swellings that often occurs in exposed areas and that may affect functional activities of patient and his life within the society (speech, visual capacity, eating, walking or manual tasks) were very significantly correlated with CU-Q2oL, as we might expect. Also, within the same sense, the study showed very good correlation between the score of the Cu-Q2oL and the UCT, that addresses questions like how severe were the symptoms and signs of CU (pruritus, wheals and swellings), how CU has interfered with the patient’s life, how much the treatment was able/unable to control the symptoms of CU, although UCT goes back to the previous four weeks [29].

The lack of effect of age and education on patients’ answers make us ensure that this measurement instrument may be used irrespective of these sociodemographic variables and that the burden of CSU is transversal to all ages and levels of education.

Comparisons between CU-Q2oL with the scores from DLQI, SF-36 and EQ-5D-5 L in the same population of Portuguese patients showed expected results with very good correlations between similar aspects evaluated by these different PROs further strengthening the validity of the measure obtained by the Portuguese version CU-Q2oL.

Also, in this study we could confirm that Portuguese results with the CU-Q2oL were in line with the results obtained by the original and the different versions translated in different languages and used in different populations [15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23], therefore confirming that the burden of CSU and its detrimental effect on the patients’ QoL is transversal to all populations of the world were these studies have been performed.

The possible limitation we may have in this study is the sample size. Therefore, we plan to pursue the implementation of the Portuguese version of the CU-Q2oL in regular medical appointments and, later, with a larger sample, to perform a confirmatory factor analysis to test the replication of the major findings.

Conclusion

Our study showed that the Portuguese version of the CU-Q2oL is semantically and culturally equivalent to the original Italian version. The good performance of the scale adapted into Portuguese, its short administration time and highly cost-effective administration make the Cu-Q2oL a valid, reliable and useful tool for research and standard clinical practice.

Availability of data and materials

The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.

Abbreviations

CSU:

Chronic Spontaneous Urticaria

CU:

Chronic Urticaria

CU-Q2oL:

Chronic Urticaria Quality of Life Questionnaire

DLQI:

Dermatology Quality of Life Index

ICC:

Intraclasse Correlation Coefficient

QoL:

Quality of Life

SF-36:

Short Form Health Survey

UAS7:

Urticaria Activity Score 7

UCT:

Urticaria Control Test

References

  1. Baiardini I, Pasquali M, Braido F, Fumagalli F, Guerra L, Compalati E, Braga M, Lombardi C, Fassio O, Canonica GW. A new tool to evaluate the impact of chronic urticaria on quality of life: chronic urticaria quality of life questionnaire (CU-QoL). Allergy. 2005 Aug;60(8):1073–8.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  2. Greaves M. Chronic urticaria. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2000 Apr;105(4):664–72.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  3. Magerl M, Altrichter S, Borzova E, Giménez-Arnau A, Grattan CE, Lawlor F, Mathelier-Fusade P, Meshkova RY, Zuberbier T, Metz M, Maurer M. The definition, diagnostic testing, and management of chronic inducible urticarias - the EAACI/GA(2) LEN/EDF/UNEV consensus recommendations 2016 update and revision. Allergy. 2016;71:780–802.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  4. Zuberbier T. Urticaria. Allergy. 2003 Dec;58(12):1224–34.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  5. Zuberbier T, Aberer W, Asero R, Abdul Latiff AH, Baker D, Ballmer-Weber B, Bernstein JA, Bindslev-Jensen C, Brzoza Z, Buense Bedrikow R, Canonica GW, Church MK, Craig T, Danilycheva IV, Dressler C, Ensina LF, Giménez-Arnau A, Godse K, Gonçalo M, Grattan C, Hebert J, Hide M, Kaplan A, Kapp A, Katelaris CH, Kocatürk E, Kulthanan K, Larenas-Linnemann D, Leslie TA, Magerl M, Mathelier-Fusade P, Meshkova RY, Metz M, Nast A, Nettis E, Oude-Elberink H, Rosumeck S, Saini SS, Sánchez-Borges M, Schmid-Grendelmeier P, Staubach P, Sussman G, Toubi E, Vena GA, Vestergaard C, Wedi B, Werner RN, Zhao Z, Maurer M. The EAACI/GA2LEN/EDF/WAO Guideline for the Definition, Classification, Diagnosis and Management of Urticaria. The 2017 Revision and Update. Allergy. 2018 Jul;73(7):1393–1414 Jan 15. doi: https://doi.org/10.1111/all.13397.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  6. Costa C, Gonçalo M. Abordagem diagnóstica e terapêutica da urticária crónica espontânea: recomendações em Portugal. Acta Medica Port. 2016 Nov;29(11):763–81.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  7. Wedi B, Wieczorek D, Raap U, Kapp A. Urticaria. J Dtsch Dermatol Ges. 2014;12:997–1007.

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  8. Baiardini I, Giardini A, Pasquali M, Dignetti P, Guerra L, Specchia C, Braido F, Majani G, Canonica GW. Quality of life and patients' satisfaction in chronic urticaria and respiratory allergy. Allergy. 2003 Jul;58(7):621–3.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  9. O'Donnell BF, Lawlor F, Simpson J, Morgan M, Greaves MW. The impact of chronic urticaria on the quality of life. Br J Dermatol. 1997 Feb;136(2):197–201.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  10. Gaig P, Olona M, Muñoz Lejarazu D, Caballero MT, Domínguez FJ, Echechipia S, García Abujeta JL, Gonzalo MA, Lleonart R, Martínez Cócera C, Rodríguez A, Ferrer M. Epidemiology of urticaria in Spain. J Investig Allergol Clin Immunol. 2004;14:214–20.

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  11. Zuberbier T, Balke M, Worm M, Edenharter G, Maurer M. Epidemiology of urticaria: a representative cross-sectional population survey. Clin Exp Dermatol. 2010;35:869–73.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  12. Carrasco J, Costa C, Gonçalo M, Guilherme M, Martins AR. Qual é o impacto económico da urticária crónica espontânea grave em Portugal? A perspetiva do Serviço Nacional de Saúde e da Sociedade Portuguesa. Coimbra: SPAIC; 2015.

    Google Scholar 

  13. Mokkink LB, Terwee CB, Patrick DL, Alonso J, Stratford PW, Knol DL, Bouter LM, de Vet HCW. The COSMIN checklist for assessing the methodological quality of studies on measurement properties of health status measurement instruments: an international Delphi study. Qual Life Res. 2010 May;19(4):539–49.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  14. Acquadro C, Conway K, Hareendran A, Aaronson N. European regulatory issues and quality of life assessment (ERIQA) group. Literature review of methods to translate health-related quality of life questionnaires for use in multinational clinical trials. Value Health. 2008;11(3):509–21.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  15. Dias GA, Pires GV, Valle SO, França AT, Papi JA, Dortas SD Jr, Levy SA, Baiardini I, Canonica GW. Cross-cultural adaptation of the Brazilian-Portuguese version of the chronic urticaria quality-of-life questionnaire - CU-Q2oL. Allergy. 2011 Nov;66(11):1487–93.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  16. Młynek A, Magerl M, Hanna M, Lhachimi S, Baiardini I, Canonica GW, Brzoza Z, Kasperska-Zajac A, Rogala B, Zalewska-Janowska A, Zuberbier T, Maurer M. The German version of the chronic Urticaria quality-of-life questionnaire: factor analysis, validation, and initial clinical findings. Allergy. 2009 Jun;64(6):927–36.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  17. Koti I, Weller K, Makris M, Tiligada E, Psaltopoulou T, Papageorgiou C, Baiardini I, Panagiotakos D, Braido F, Maurer M. Disease activity only moderately correlates with quality of life impairment in patients with chronic spontaneous urticaria. Dermatol. 2013;226(4):371–9.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  18. Kessel A, Graif Y, Vadasz Z, Schichter-Konfino V, Almog M, Cohen S, Teplitski V, Stein N, Baiardini I, Maurer M, Toubi E. Adaptation and validation of the Israeli version of the chronic Urticaria quality of life questionnaire (CU-Q2oL). Isr Med Assoc J. 2016 Aug;18(8):461–5.

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  19. Tavakol M, Mohammadinejad P, Baiardini I, Braido F, Gharagozlou M, Aghamohammadi A, Nabavi M, Dabbaghzade A, Tavakol Z, Afarideh M, Rezaei N. The Persian version of the chronic urticaria quality of life questionnaire: factor analysis, validation, and initial clinical findings. Iran J Allergy Asthma Immunol. 2014 Aug;13(4):278–85.

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  20. Brzoza Z, Badura-Brzoza K, Młynek A, Magerl M, Baiardini I, Canonica GW, Weller K, Kocatürk E, Kalogeromitros D, Zalewska-Janowska A, Zuberbier T, Maurer M. Adaptation and initial results of the polish version of the GA(2)LEN chronic urticaria quality of life questionnaire (CU-Q(2)oL). J Dermatol Sci. 2011 Apr;62(1):36–41.

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  21. Valero A, Herdman M, Bartra J, Ferrer M, Jáuregui I, Dávila I, del Cuvillo A, Montoro J, Mullol J, Sastre J, Canonica GW, Baiardini I. Adaptation and validation of the Spanish version of the chronic Urticaria quality of life questionnaire (CU-Q2oL). J Investig Allergol Clin Immunol. 2008;18(6):426–32.

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  22. Kulthanan K, Chularojanamontri L, Tuchinda P, Rujitharanawong C, Baiardini I, Braido F. Minimal clinical important difference (MCID) of the Thai chronic Urticaria quality of life questionnaire (CU-Q2oL). Asian Pac J Allergy Immunol. 2016 Jun;34(2):137–45.

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  23. Kocatürk E, Weller K, Martus P, Aktas S, Kavala M, Sarigul S, Baiardini I, Canonica GW, Brzoza Z, Kalogeromitros D, Maurer M. Turkish version of the chronic urticaria quality of life questionnaire: cultural adaptation, assessment of reliability and validity. Acta Derm Venereol. 2012 Jul;92(4):419–25.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  24. Finlay AY, Khan GK. Dermatology life quality index (DLQI)--a simple practical measure for routine clinical use. Clin Exp Dermatol. 1994 May;19(3):210–6.

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  25. Ferreira P. Creation of the Portuguese version of the MOS SF-36. Part I—linguistic and cultural adaptation. Acta Medica Port. 2000;13:55–66.

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  26. Ware J, Sherbourne C. The MOS 36-item short-form health survey (SF-36). Conceptual framework and item selection. Med Care. 1992;30:473–83.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  27. Devlin N, Shah K, Feng Y, Mulhern B, van Hout B. Valuing health-related quality of life: an EQ-5D-5L value set for England. Health Econ. 2017:1–16.

  28. Ferreira PL, Antunes P, Ferreira LN, Pereira LN, Ramos-Goñi LM. A hybrid modelling approach for eliciting health states preferences: the Portuguese EQ-5D-5L value set. Qual Life Res: 14 June 2019.

  29. Weller K, Groffik A, Church MK, Hawro T, Krause K, Metz M, Martus P, Casale TB, Staubach P, Maurer M. Development and validation of the Urticaria Control Test: a patient-reported outcome instrument for assessing urticaria control. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2014 May;133(5):1365–1372, 1372.e1–6.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  30. Koo TK, Li MY. A guideline of selecting and reporting intraclass correlation coefficients for reliability research. J Chiropr Med. 2016 Jun;15(2):155–63.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  31. Terwee CB, Bot SD, de Boer MR, van der Windt DA, Knol DL, Dekker J, Bouter LM, de Vet HC. Quality criteria were proposed for measurement properties of health status questionnaires. J Clin Epidemiol. 2007 Jan;60(1):34–42.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  32. de Vet HC, Terwee CB, Mokkink LB, Knol DL. Measurement in medicine. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2011.

    Book  Google Scholar 

  33. Cohen J. Statistical power analysis for the behavioural sciences. New York: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates; 1988.

    Google Scholar 

  34. Costa C, Rosmaninho I, Guilherme A, Ferreira J, Antunes J, Pina A, Prates S, Marques JG, Azevedo F, Cunha AP, Brito C, Massa A, Sousa JT, Velho GC, Raposo I, Pinto GM, Sousa V, Martins AR. Chronic Urticaria in the real-life clinical practice setting in Portugal: baseline results from the non-interventional multicentre AWARE study. Acta Medica Port. 2019 Feb 28;32(2):133–40.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  35. Maurer M, Houghton K, Costa C, Dabove F, Ensina LF, Giménez-Arnau A, Guillet G, Konstantinou GN, Labrador-Horrillo M, Lapeere H, Meshkova R, Pastorello EA, Velásquez-Lopera M, Tamayo Quijano LM, Vestergaard C, Chapman-Rothe N. Differences in chronic spontaneous urticaria between Europe and Central/South America: results of the multi-center real world AWARE study. World Allergy Organ J. 2018 Nov 16;11(1):32. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40413-018-0216-1.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

Download references

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank the patients who participated in this study.

Funding

This project was partly funded by a research grant from Novartis Farma. However, the authors were not in any way influenced by this funding. This has only been used for logistic purposes.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Contributions

PLF and MG contributed to the study concept, participated in its design, coordination and drafted the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Pedro Lopes Ferreira.

Ethics declarations

Ethics approval and consent to participate

The National Data Protection Agency and the Ethics Committees of all four hospitals approved the study and all participants gave their previous informed consent to participate in the study. There was, under no circumstances, any interference with the health professional decision regarding the best-suited medical approach to each patient.

Consent for publication

Not applicable.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Additional information

Publisher’s Note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Rights and permissions

Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark

Cite this article

Ferreira, P.L., Gonçalo, M., Ferreira, J.A. et al. Psychometric properties of the portuguese version of the chronic urticaria quality of life questionnaire (CU-Q2oL). Health Qual Life Outcomes 17, 190 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12955-019-1266-y

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12955-019-1266-y

Keywords