Diagnostics (Nov 2021)

Development of a Subjective Symptom Rating Scale for Postoperative Oral Dysfunction in Patients with Oral Cancer: Reliability and Validity of the Postoperative Oral Dysfunction Scale-10

  • Yuhei Matsuda,
  • Isami Kumakura,
  • Tatsuo Okui,
  • Masaaki Karino,
  • Noriaki Aoi,
  • Satoe Okuma,
  • Mayu Takeda,
  • Kenji Hayashida,
  • Tatsunori Sakamoto,
  • Takahiro Kanno

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics11112061
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 11
p. 2061

Abstract

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Currently, there is no scale to subjectively assess postoperative oral dysfunction in patients with oral cancer. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the reliability and validity of the Postoperative Oral Dysfunction Scale (POD-10) that we developed. Between September 2019 and August 2021, 62 eligible oral cancer patients (median age, 72 years; 42 men and 20 women) were enrolled in the study. The Cronbach’s alpha coefficient, which indicates the internal consistency of the scale, was 0.94, and the intraclass correlation coefficient, which indicates reproducibility, was 0.85 (95% confidential interval: 0.40–0.96, p p p < 0.05). Twenty-four points were calculated as the cutoff value for POD-10 using receiver operating characteristic analysis to calculate the cutoff value. The POD-10 was shown to be a clinically reliable and valid scale that can be used to subjectively assess postoperative oral dysfunction in patients with oral cancer and is expected to be used as a simple diagnostic tool.

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