%0 Journal Article %A De Smedt, Delphine %A Clays, Els %A Doyle, Frank %A Kotseva, Kornelia %A Prugger, Christof %A Pajak, Andrzej %A Jennings, Catriona %A Wood, David %A De Bacquer, Dirk %D 2019 %T Validity and reliability of three commonly used Quality of Life measures in a large European population of coronary heart disease patients. %U https://repository.rcsi.com/articles/journal_contribution/Validity_and_reliability_of_three_commonly_used_Quality_of_Life_measures_in_a_large_European_population_of_coronary_heart_disease_patients_/10772456 %2 https://repository.rcsi.com/ndownloader/files/19285124 %K Quality of life %K SF-12 %K EQ-5D %K HADS %K Coronary patients %K Psychometric %K Psychology and Cognitive Sciences not elsewhere classified %X

Objective: To investigate the validity and reliability of the EuroQol (EQ-5D), the Short form health survey (SF-12v2), and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) in a stable coronary population.

Study Design: Cross-sectional study EUROPASPIRE III

Setting: Quality of Life data (Qol) were available on 8745 patients hospitalized for coronary artery bypass graft (CABG), percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) or acute myocardial infarction (AMI). They were interviewed and examined at least 6 months after their hospital admission. Reliability and validity of the 3 instruments were tested. Internal consistency, and discriminative, convergent, criterion and construct validity were assessed.

Results: Cronbach's alpha indicated good internal consistency for all measures (0.73 to 0.87). Discriminative validity analyses confirmed significant QoL differences between known groups: age, gender, educational level. In addition, all hypothesized correlations between QoL constructs (convergent validity) and items (criterion validity) were confirmed with significant correlations. Confirmatory factor analyses indicated good construct validity for HADS and SF-12v2. On country-specific level, results were roughly similar.

Conclusion: The EQ-5D as well as the SF-12v2 and the HADS are reliable and valid instruments for use in a stable coronary population, both on aggregate European level as on country-specific level. However, our results must be generalized with caution, because EUROASPIRE III patients might not be representative for all patients with stable coronary heart disease.

%I Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland