Journal of Clinical Medicine (Apr 2023)

The Inflammatory Bowel Disease—Disk Tool for Assessing Disability in Inflammatory Bowel Disease Patients: Validation of the Greek Version

  • Anastasia Katsoula,
  • Georgios Axiaris,
  • Afroditi Mpitouli,
  • Maria Palatianou,
  • Angeliki Christidou,
  • Nikolaos Dimitriadis,
  • Andreas Nakos,
  • Ploutarchos Pastras,
  • Panagiotis Kourkoulis,
  • Pantelis Karatzas,
  • Miltiadis Moutzoukis,
  • Charalampos Zlatinoudis,
  • Athanasios Philippidis,
  • Anastasia Kourikou,
  • Georgios Kokkotis,
  • Antonios Gklavas,
  • Angeliki Machaira,
  • Aikaterini Mantaka,
  • Persefoni Talimtzi,
  • Evaggelia Anagnostopoulou,
  • Ioannis E. Koutroubakis,
  • Ioannis Papaconstantinou,
  • Georgios Bamias,
  • Spilios Manolakopoulos,
  • Nicoletta Mathou,
  • Konstantina Paraskeva,
  • Andreas Protopappas,
  • Eftychia Tsironi,
  • Konstantinos H. Katsanos,
  • Dimitrios K. Christodoulou,
  • Georgios Papatheodoridis,
  • Georgios Michalopoulos,
  • Georgios Theocharis,
  • Christos Triantos,
  • Ioannis Pachiadakis,
  • Konstantinos Soufleris,
  • Nikolaos Viazis,
  • Gerassimos J. Mantzaris,
  • Georgios Tribonias,
  • Maria Tzouvala,
  • Angeliki Theodoropoulou,
  • Konstantinos Karmiris,
  • Evanthia Zampeli,
  • Spyridon Michopoulos,
  • Anna-Bettina Haidich,
  • Olga Giouleme

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12083023
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 8
p. 3023

Abstract

Read online

Background: The Inflammatory Bowel Disease-Disk (IBD-Disk) is a physician-administered tool that evaluates the functional status of patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD). The aim of our study was to validate the content of the IBD-Disk in a Greek cohort of IBD patients. Methods: Two questionnaires [the IBD Disk and the IBD-Disability Index (IBD-DI)] were translated into Greek and administered to IBD patients at baseline visit, after 4 weeks and 6 months. Validation of the IBD Disk included measuring of concurrent validity, reproducibility, and internal consistency. Results: A total of 300 patients were included at baseline and 269 at follow-up. There was a good correlation between the total scores of the IBD-Disk and IBD-DI at baseline (Pearson correlation 0.87, p < 0.001). Reproducibility of the total IBD-Disk score was very good [intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC), 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.89 (0.86–0.91)]. Cronbach’s coefficient alpha for all items achieved 0.90 (95%CI 0.88–0.92), demonstrating a very good homogeneity of the IBD-Disk items. Female gender and extraintestinal manifestations were significantly associated with a higher IBD-Disk total score. Conclusions: The Greek version of the IBD-Disk proved to be a reliable and valid tool in detecting and assessing IBD-related disability in a Greek cohort of IBD patients.

Keywords