Construct validity of the Hungarian Version of the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement
Information System-29 Profile Among Patients With Low Back Pain
We aim to evaluate psychometric properties of the Hungarian version of Patient Reported
Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS®)-29 Profile domains among patients
with chronic low back pain.Convenience, cross-sectional sample recruited at our neurosurgical
institution. Participants completed paper-pencil version of the PROMIS-29 Profile
alongside validated legacy questionnaires - Oswestry Disability Index, Research and
Development (RAND)-36, General Anxiety Disorder-7 scale, Patient Health Questionnaire-9
scale. Reliability was evaluated by calculating internal consistency (Cronbach's α).
Test-retest reliability was assessed using intraclass correlation coefficient. Structural
validity of PROMIS-29 was assessed using confirmatory factor analysis. Construct validity
was assessed by evaluating convergent and discriminant validity using Spearman's rank
correlation. To further corroborate construct validity, we also performed known-groups
comparisons.Mean (SD) age of the 131 participants was 54 (16), 62% were female. Internal
consistency of each PROMIS domain was high (Cronbach's α>0.89 for all). Test-retest
reliability was excellent (ICC>0.97). Confirmatory factor analysis showed good structural
validity (CFI>0.96, RSMR<0.026 for all domains). All measured PROMIS scores strongly
correlated with scores obtained with the corresponding primary legacy instrument,
indicating excellent convergent validity. Known-groups comparisons demonstrated differences
as hypothesized.We present data supporting the validity and reliability of the Hungarian
PROMIS-29 Profile short forms in patients with low back pain. This instrument will
be useful for research and clinical applications in spine care.