Health and Quality of Life Outcomes (Nov 2004)

The Menopause Rating Scale (MRS) as outcome measure for hormone treatment? A validation study

  • Schnitker Jörg,
  • Gerbsch Silvia,
  • Strelow Frank,
  • DoMinh Thai,
  • Heinemann Lothar AJ,
  • Schneider Hermann PG

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1477-7525-2-67
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
p. 67

Abstract

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Background The Menopause Rating Scale is a health-related Quality of Life scale developed in the early 1990s and step-by-step validated since then. No methodologically detailed work on the utility of the scale to assess health-related changes after treatment was published before. Method We analysed an open, uncontrolled post-marketing study with over 9000 women with pre- and post-treatment data of the MRS scale to critically evaluate the capacity of the scale to measure the health-related effects of hormone treatment independent from the severity of complaints at baseline. Results The improvement of complaints during treatment relative to the baseline score was 36% in average. Patients with little/no complaints before therapy improved by 11%, those with mild complaints at entry by 32%, with moderate by 44%, and with severe symptoms by 55% – compared with the baseline score. We showed that the distribution of complaints in women before therapy returned to norm values after 6 months of hormone treatment. We also provided weak evidence that the MRS results may well predict the assessment of the treating physician. Limitations of the study, however, may have lead to overestimating the utility of the MRS scale as outcome measure. Conclusion The MRS scale showed some evidence for its ability to measure treatment effects on quality of life across the full range of severity of complaints in aging women. This however needs confirmation in other and better-designed clinical/outcome studies.

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