Publication:
Validity and reliability of the Serbian version of Patient-Reported Impact of Spasticity Measure in multiple sclerosis

dc.contributor.authorKnezevic, Tatjana (25121459700)
dc.contributor.authorKonstantinovic, Ljubica (16207335300)
dc.contributor.authorRodic, Sindi (56241921400)
dc.contributor.authorFoti, Calogero (7006569923)
dc.contributor.authorDrulovic, Jelena (55886929900)
dc.contributor.authorDackovic, Jelena (19034069600)
dc.contributor.authorNikolic, Dejan (26023650800)
dc.contributor.authorPetronic, Ivana (25121756800)
dc.contributor.authorStokic, Dobrivoje S. (7005398132)
dc.date.accessioned2025-06-12T19:27:07Z
dc.date.available2025-06-12T19:27:07Z
dc.date.issued2015
dc.description.abstractThe Patient-Reported Impact of Spasticity Measure (PRISM) has been developed recently to assess the impact of spasticity on quality of life after spinal cord injury. Although PRISM may also be useful in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), its psychometric properties in MS have not been established and PRISM is currently available only in English. The aims of this cross-sectional study were to translate PRISM into the Serbian language (PRISM SR) and examine its validity (construct, convergent, divergent) and reliability (internal consistency, test-retest reliability) in 48 patients with spasticity because of MS diagnosed at least 1 year earlier and in remission at least 3 months. PRISM SR was administered twice 3 days apart. The validity of seven PRISM SR subscales was examined against the Modified Ashworth Scale (MAS), the Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) for spasticity, sex, and education. Internal consistency was assessed with Cronbach α and test-retest reliability with intraclass correlation coefficient for agreement (ICC 2,1). During the forward-backward translation, only one PRISM item required minor cultural adaption. Almost all PRISM SR scores correlated significantly with MAS and NRS scores (r=0.29-0.51, 0.001≤P≤0.043). They were all significantly higher for MAS≥2 group versus the MAS<2 group (0.003≤P≤0.035) and for the NRS≥7 group versus the NRS<7 group (0.001≤P≤0.042), except for the Social Embarrassment subscale (P=0.083). The PRISM SR scores were not significantly different between sexes (P≥0.104) or those with high school versus college degree (P≥0.139). Both Cronbach α (0.78-0.93) and test-retest ICC 2,1 (0.82-0.90) were high. The original PRISM may be translated successfully into other languages. PRISM SR shows adequate validity and reliability for assessing the impact of spasticity on quality of life in patients with MS. © 2015 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.1097/MRR.0000000000000107
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84939565347&doi=10.1097%2fMRR.0000000000000107&partnerID=40&md5=c7f39bcc2b63262ee2ea7afe67378fa9
dc.identifier.urihttps://remedy.med.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/8129
dc.subjectmultiple sclerosis
dc.subjectPatient Reported Impact of Spasticity Measure scale
dc.subjectreliability
dc.subjectspasticity
dc.subjectvalidity
dc.titleValidity and reliability of the Serbian version of Patient-Reported Impact of Spasticity Measure in multiple sclerosis
dspace.entity.typePublication

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