Italian Version of the Motricity Index
- Conditions
- Validation StudyReliability and ValidityCross-Cultural ComparisonDisability Physical
- Registration Number
- NCT05828160
- Lead Sponsor
- Fondazione Don Carlo Gnocchi Onlus
- Brief Summary
This study aims to develop and validate the Italian version of the Motricity Index (MI-Italian), through the following steps:
* translation of the MI into Italian, by using the forward-backward translation approach, to produce a pre-final MI-Italian
* pre-pilot testing of the pre-final MI-Italian in a sample of ten health professionals (physicians and physiotherapists), who will be asked to judge the clarity of each item of the MI, including scoring instructions, to produce a final MI-Italian
* evaluation of the metric properties (internal consistency, inter- and intra-rater reliability, validity and responsiveness) of the final MI-Italian in a sample of subjects admitted to the Don Gnocchi Foundation in Florence for rehabilitation after stroke.
- Detailed Description
The Motricity Index (MI), developed by Demeurisse et al. in 1980, is an ordinal method for measuring motor impairment in post-stroke hemiparesis, focusing on muscle strength of proximal and distal muscle groups of upper and lower extremity. Since its introduction, it has been widely used. However, despite unofficial versions circulating in clinical settings, there is currently no validated Italian version of the scale. This study aims to develop this version and to evaluate its metric properties in a sample of subjects who had a stroke.
A pre-final MI-Italian will be produced following established international guidelines (forward-backward translation, each step involving two different translators). This version will be tested in a group of health professionals (physicians and physiotherapists) who will be asked to judge the clarity of each item of the scale, including scoring instructions, using a dichotomous response (clear/unclear). Items that are judged unclear by more than 20 percent of the professionals will be revised by the multidisciplinary translation team to produce the final MI-Italian.
The final MI-Italian will then be administered to a sample of at least 100 subjects with stroke to assess its metric properties. Participants will be enrolled among patients admitted to the Don Gnocchi Foundation in Florence for stroke rehabilitation. To assess reliability, upon admission each patient will be independently assessed using the MI-Italian by two examiners, drawn at random from a group of ten physiotherapists. One of the two raters will administer the scale twice on consecutive days. Other evaluators will administer other clinical scales (Fugl-Meyer assessment, FMA; modified Barthel index, mBI; modified Rankin scale, mRS) to assess the validity of the MI-Italian. All raters will be blinded to all other assessments and to their previous assessment, if any. All the scales will be administered again at discharge, when participants will also be asked to indicate the perceived change since admission in their ability to move and use the paretic limbs. For the latter, a 7-points Global Rating of Perceived Change (GRPC) Lickert scale will be used.
The Cronbach's alpha will be used to estimate the internal consistency of the scale. To assess intra-rater and inter-rater reliability, the Intraclass Correlation Coefficient (ICC1,1), Standard Error of the Measurement (SEM) and Minimal Detectable Change with 95% Confidence (MDC95) will be computed. Criterion and construct validity will be assessed by computing the association between the MI-Italian and the FMA, the mBI and the mRS, at both admission and discharge. For responsiveness, the following indices will be calculated: 1) Guyatt Responsiveness Index (GRI); 2) Standardized Response Mean (SMR), both in the whole sample and in subgroups of participants with different outcome (improved, unchanged, worsened) based on the GPRC; 3) Minimal Clinically Important Difference (MCID). The latter will be derived using the ROC curve approach, using the patient's perceived change in his/her ability to move and use the paretic limbs as an anchor.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- NOT_YET_RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 115
Not provided
Not provided
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Internal Consistency - Discharge assessment Discharge (T1) assessment. Time of discharge will vary among participants, so a definite time point cannot be stated. On average, discharge is expected after 30 days from admission. Cronbach's alpha
Intra-rater reliability (error of measurement) Test and Retest assessments, conducted 1-3 days apart. Standard Error of the Measurements (SEM), computed as the standard deviation of the two measures collected by the same rater, multiplied by the square root of 1 minus ICC.
Inter-rater reliability Admission assessment conducted independently by two raters 30-60 minutes apart. One-way random-effects model sIngle measures Intraclass Correlation Coefficient (ICC1,1)
Intra-rater reliability Test and Retest assessments, conducted 1-3 days apart. One-way random-effects model sIngle measures Intraclass Correlation Coefficient (ICC1,1)
Intra-rater reliability (Minimal Detectable Change) Test and Retest assessments, conducted 1-3 days apart. Minimal Detectable Change at the 95 % confidence level (MDC 95), computed as the SEM multiplied by 1,96 multiplied by the square root of 2.
Responsiveness (change of MI-Italian scores from admission to discharge) - Guyatt Responsiveness Index (GRI) Admission (T0) and Discharge (T1) assessment. Time of discharge will vary among participants, so a definite time point cannot be stated. On average, discharge is expected after 30 days from admission. For each subject, the change score at the MI-Italian will be calculated as the difference between T1 and T0 assessment. The GRI will be calculated as the ratio of the mean change score difference between improved and stable patients and the standard deviation of the individual change scores in stable patients. Improved and stable patients will be detected based on the GRPC.
Responsiveness (change of MI-Italian scores from admission to discharge) - Minimal Clinically Important Difference (MCID). Admission (T0) and Discharge (T1) assessment. Time of discharge will vary among participants, so a definite time point cannot be stated. On average, discharge is expected after 30 days from admission. For each subject, the change score at the MI-Italian will be calculated as the difference between T1 and T0 assessment. The Receiving Operator Characteristic (ROC) curve approach will be used to estimate the minimal change score associated with clinically important change (i.e., the MCID), using the GRPC as an anchor.
Inter-rater reliability (error of measurement) Admission assessment conducted independently by two raters 30-60 minutes apart. Standard Error of the Measurements (SEM), computed as the standard deviation of the measures collected by two independent raters, multiplied by the square root of 1 minus ICC.
Criterion Validity - Association with reference standard at admission. Admission assessment (T0). Estimation of the correlation between the MI-Italian and Motricity subsection of the Fugl Meyer Assessment (FMA) scale, separately for upper limb and lower limb.
Criterion Validity - Association with reference standard at discharge Discharge (T1) assessment. Time of discharge will vary among participants, so a definite time point cannot be stated. On average, discharge is expected after 30 days from admission. Estimation of the correlation between the MI-Italian and Motricity subsection of the Fugl Meyer Assessment (FMA) scale, separately for upper limb and lower limb.
Internal Consistency - Baseline assessment Assessment at admission (T0), Cronbach's alpha
Construct validity (Hypothesis testing) - Association with function at admission Admission assessment (T0). Estimation of the correlation between the total scores of the MI-Italian and the modified Barthel Index (mBI).
Construct validity (Hypothesis testing) - Association with function at discharge. Discharge (T1) assessment. Time of discharge will vary among participants, so a definite time point cannot be stated. On average, discharge is expected after 30 days from admission. Estimation of the correlation between the total scores of the MI-Italian and the modified Barthel Index (mBI).
Inter-rater reliability (Minimal Detectable Change) Admission assessment conducted independently by two raters 30-60 minutes apart. Minimal Detectable Change at the 95 % confidence level (MDC 95), computed as the SEM multiplied by 1,96 multiplied by the square root of 2.
Responsiveness (change of MI-Italian scores from admission to discharge) - Standardized Response Mean (SRM). Admission (T0) and Discharge (T1) assessment. Time of discharge will vary among participants, so a definite time point cannot be stated. On average, discharge is expected after 30 days from admission. For each subject, the change score at the MI-Italian will be calculated as the difference between T1 and T0 assessment. The SRM will be calculated as the ratio of observed change and the standard deviation reflecting the variability of the change scores, both in the whole sample and separately in groups with different outcome based on the Global Rating of Perceived Change (GRPC).
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method