Frontiers in Psychiatry (Jun 2023)

Rasch analyses of the Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology Self-Report in neurodegenerative and major depressive disorders

  • Anthony L. Vaccarino,
  • Sandra E. Black,
  • Sandra E. Black,
  • Susan Gilbert Evans,
  • Benicio N. Frey,
  • Benicio N. Frey,
  • Mojib Javadi,
  • Sidney H. Kennedy,
  • Benjamin Lam,
  • Raymond W. Lam,
  • Bianca Lasalandra,
  • Emily Martens,
  • Mario Masellis,
  • Roumen Milev,
  • Roumen Milev,
  • Sara Mitchell,
  • Douglas P. Munoz,
  • Alana Sparks,
  • Richard H. Swartz,
  • Richard H. Swartz,
  • Brian Tan,
  • Rudolf Uher,
  • Kenneth R. Evans

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1154519
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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BackgroundSymptoms of depression are present in neurodegenerative disorders (ND). It is important that depression-related symptoms be adequately screened and monitored in persons living with ND. The Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology Self-Report (QIDS-SR) is a widely-used self-report measure to assess and monitor depressive severity across different patient populations. However, the measurement properties of the QIDS-SR have not been assessed in ND.AimTo use Rasch Measurement Theory to assess the measurement properties of the Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology Self-Report (QIDS-SR) in ND and in comparison to major depressive disorder (MDD).MethodsDe-identified data from the Ontario Neurodegenerative Disease Research Initiative (NCT04104373) and Canadian Biomarker Integration Network in Depression (NCT01655706) were used in the analyses. Five hundred and twenty participants with ND (Alzheimer’s disease or mild cognitive impairment, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, cerebrovascular disease, frontotemporal dementia and Parkinson’s disease) and 117 participants with major depressive disorder (MDD) were administered the QIDS-SR. Rasch Measurement Theory was used to assess measurement properties of the QIDS-SR, including unidimensionality and item-level fit, category ordering, item targeting, person separation index and reliability and differential item functioning.ResultsThe QIDS-SR fit well to the Rasch model in ND and MDD, including unidimensionality, satisfactory category ordering and goodness-of-fit. Item-person measures (Wright maps) showed gaps in item difficulties, suggesting poor precision for persons falling between those severity levels. Differences between mean person and item measures in the ND cohort logits suggest that QIDS-SR items target more severe depression than experienced by the ND cohort. Some items showed differential item functioning between cohorts.ConclusionThe present study supports the use of the QIDS-SR in MDD and suggest that the QIDS-SR can be also used to screen for depressive symptoms in persons with ND. However, gaps in item targeting were noted that suggests that the QIDS-SR cannot differentiate participants falling within certain severity levels. Future studies would benefit from examination in a more severely depressed ND cohort, including those with diagnosed clinical depression.

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