» Articles » PMID: 20554116

Development of a PROMIS Item Bank to Measure Pain Interference

Overview
Journal Pain
Specialties Neurology
Psychiatry
Date 2010 Jun 18
PMID 20554116
Citations 500
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

This paper describes the psychometric properties of the PROMIS-pain interference (PROMIS-PI) bank. An initial candidate item pool (n=644) was developed and evaluated based on the review of existing instruments, interviews with patients, and consultation with pain experts. From this pool, a candidate item bank of 56 items was selected and responses to the items were collected from large community and clinical samples. A total of 14,848 participants responded to all or a subset of candidate items. The responses were calibrated using an item response theory (IRT) model. A final 41-item bank was evaluated with respect to IRT assumptions, model fit, differential item function (DIF), precision, and construct and concurrent validity. Items of the revised bank had good fit to the IRT model (CFI and NNFI/TLI ranged from 0.974 to 0.997), and the data were strongly unidimensional (e.g., ratio of first and second eigenvalue=35). Nine items exhibited statistically significant DIF. However, adjusting for DIF had little practical impact on score estimates and the items were retained without modifying scoring. Scores provided substantial information across levels of pain; for scores in the T-score range 50-80, the reliability was equivalent to 0.96-0.99. Patterns of correlations with other health outcomes supported the construct validity of the item bank. The scores discriminated among persons with different numbers of chronic conditions, disabling conditions, levels of self-reported health, and pain intensity (p<0.0001). The results indicated that the PROMIS-PI items constitute a psychometrically sound bank. Computerized adaptive testing and short forms are available.

Citing Articles

Revealing the Progression of Pain Pathways and Identifying Chronification of Pain Predictors After an Isolated Lateral Ankle Sprain: Project RECOIL.

Kosik K, Hoch M, Patlan I, Slone S, Torp D, Van Wyngaarden J J Pain Res. 2025; 18:931-945.

PMID: 40027208 PMC: 11872060. DOI: 10.2147/JPR.S488420.


Health-related quality of life after major extremity trauma: qualitative research with military service members and clinicians to inform measurement of patient-reported outcomes.

Tyner C, Kisala P, Slotkin J, Cohen M, Cancio J, Pruziner A Qual Life Res. 2025; .

PMID: 39976875 DOI: 10.1007/s11136-025-03915-0.


A Multi-Systems Approach to Human Movement after ACL Reconstruction: The Nervous System.

Chaput M, Ness B, Lucas K, Zimney K Int J Sports Phys Ther. 2025; 17(1):47-59.

PMID: 39974283 PMC: 11837868. DOI: 10.26603/001c.30020.


Estimating minimal important change of the National Institutes of health research task force impact score using computer adaptive measures: a secondary analysis of two randomized clinical trials in a military population with chronic pain.

Flynn D, Burke L, Steffen A, Ransom J, Orr K, McQuinn H BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2025; 26(1):137.

PMID: 39934777 PMC: 11817800. DOI: 10.1186/s12891-025-08378-5.


Improvements in pain interference among geographically diverse adults with neurofibromatosis: Results from a fully powered randomized controlled trial.

Hooker J, Doorley J, Greenberg J, Bakhshaie J, Manglani H, Briskin E Neurooncol Pract. 2025; 12(1):58-67.

PMID: 39917761 PMC: 11798604. DOI: 10.1093/nop/npae084.


References
1.
Reise S, Waller N, Comrey A . Factor analysis and scale revision. Psychol Assess. 2000; 12(3):287-97. DOI: 10.1037//1040-3590.12.3.287. View

2.
Kerns R, Turk D, Rudy T . The West Haven-Yale Multidimensional Pain Inventory (WHYMPI). Pain. 1985; 23(4):345-356. DOI: 10.1016/0304-3959(85)90004-1. View

3.
Klepstad P, Loge J, Borchgrevink P, Mendoza T, Cleeland C, Kaasa S . The Norwegian brief pain inventory questionnaire: translation and validation in cancer pain patients. J Pain Symptom Manage. 2003; 24(5):517-25. DOI: 10.1016/s0885-3924(02)00526-2. View

4.
Ware Jr J, Sherbourne C . The MOS 36-item short-form health survey (SF-36). I. Conceptual framework and item selection. Med Care. 1992; 30(6):473-83. View

5.
Ware Jr J . Conceptualization and measurement of health-related quality of life: comments on an evolving field. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2003; 84(4 Suppl 2):S43-51. DOI: 10.1053/apmr.2003.50246. View