World Health Organization (WHO) International Classification of Functioning, Disability
and Health (ICF) Core Set Development for Interstitial Lung Disease
Background: The World Health Organization (WHO) introduced the International Classification
of Functioning, Disability, and Health (ICF) as a scientific method of disability
data collection comprised of >1,200 categories describing the spectrum of impairment
types (functional, symptoms-based and anatomical) under the bio-psycho-social model
with consideration of environmental and personal factors (pf). ICF Core Sets and ICF
Checklists are streamlined disease-specific resources for clinical use, service provision,
and for use in health economics and health policy. ICF can disclose strengths and
weaknesses across multiple patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) and help consolidate
best-fitting question-items from multiple PROMs. Interstitial lung diseases (ILDs),
are generally progressive, with restrictive physiology sometimes occurring in the
context of multi-organ autoimmunity/inflammatory conditions such as connective tissue
diseases (CTDs). In spite of significant associated morbidity and potential disability,
ILD has yet to be linked to the ICF. Methods: Each instrument and their question-items
within the consensus-recommended core sets for clinical trials in ILD were deconstructed
to single concept units, and then linked per updated ICF linkage rules. Inter-linker
agreement was established. Three additional subsequently validated measures were also
included. Results: One-hundred-eleven ICF categories were identified for ten PROMs
and three traditional objective measures that were amenable to ICF linkage. The proportion
of agreement ranged from 0.79 (95% CI: 0.62, 0.91) to 0.93 (0.76, 0.99) with the overall
proportion of inter-linker agreement being very high 0.86 (0.82, 0.89) for the initial
instruments, with 94-100% for the three additional PROMs. Thirty-four new 'Personal
Factors' emerged to capture disease-specific qualities not elsewhere described in
ICF, e.g. 'pf_embarrassed by cough' or 'pf_panic/afraid when can't get a breath'.
Conclusion: This first known effort in ICF linkage of ILD has provided important revelations
on the current utility of the ICF in lung disease. Results have indicated areas for
meaningful assessment of ICF descriptors for lung impairment. The mapping across PROMs
provides insight into possibilities of developing more streamline and precise instrumentation.
Finally, familiarity with the ICF in ILD may enable clinicians to experience a smoother
transition with the imminent harmonization of ICD and ICF, ICD-11.