Psychometric and Clinical Evaluation of the Clinician (VQIDS-C<sub>5</sub>) and Self-Report (VQIDS-SR<sub>5</sub>) Versions of the Very Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptoms.

dc.contributor.author

Rush, A John

dc.contributor.author

Madia, Nancy D

dc.contributor.author

Carmody, Thomas

dc.contributor.author

Trivedi, Madhukar H

dc.date.accessioned

2022-04-03T19:28:25Z

dc.date.available

2022-04-03T19:28:25Z

dc.date.issued

2022-01

dc.date.updated

2022-04-03T19:28:23Z

dc.description.abstract

Purpose

Evaluate the psychometric properties of the 5-item Very Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology self-report and clinician-rated versions (VQIDS-SR5/VQIDS-C5), compare their relative performance, create crosswalks between their total scores and other accepted depressive symptom ratings, and define clinically relevant depressive symptom severity thresholds and categorical outcomes for both versions.

Patients and methods

The Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression trial obtained baseline and exit 17-item Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRSD17) and 30-item Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology - Clinician-rated scores, and baseline and visit-wise QIDS-SR16 and QIDS-C16 ratings from the first treatment step (citalopram). The VQIDS-C5 and the VQIDS-SR5 items (sad mood, self-outlook, involvement, fatigue, psychomotor slowing) (each rated 0-3), extracted from the corresponding 16-item ratings, were selected to best reflect the 6-item HRSD (HRSD6) (exclusive of anxiety). Classical Test Theory (CTT) and Item-Response Theory (IRT) analyses assessed psychometric features. IRT analyses produced total score crosswalks between the VQIDS5, QIDS-C16, QIDS-SR16 and HRSD6. Clinically relevant VQIDS symptom severity thresholds and treatment outcomes were estimated based on cross-walks from the parent QIDS16 ratings.

Results

Both VQIDS versions were unifactorial with acceptable internal consistencies (Cronbach's alphas >0.80), item-total correlations (0.57-0.74) by CCT, and strong IRT item performance. Based on QIDS16 severity thresholds (none 0-5; mild 6-10; moderate 11-15; severe 16-20; and very severe 21-27), comparable thresholds were 0-2; 3-5; 6-9; 9-12; and >12 for VQIDS-C5, and 0-2; 2-5; 6-8; 9-12; and >12 for VQIDS-SR5. Kappa values were acceptable in comparing categories of outcomes (eg, no benefit, remission, etc) based on VQIDS and corresponding QIDS categories.

Conclusion

The VQIDS-C5 and VQIDS-SR5 assess selected core depressive symptoms with psychometrically acceptable properties. Theelf-report and clinician-rated versions provide virtually identical information, symptom severity thresholds and symptom change categories. Both are as sensitive to change as the corresponding QIDS16, making them suitable for use in busy practices.
dc.identifier

342457

dc.identifier.issn

1176-6328

dc.identifier.issn

1178-2021

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24778

dc.language

eng

dc.publisher

Informa UK Limited

dc.relation.ispartof

Neuropsychiatric disease and treatment

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10.2147/ndt.s342457

dc.subject

QIDS

dc.subject

depression

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psychometrics

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rating scales

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self-report

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symptoms

dc.title

Psychometric and Clinical Evaluation of the Clinician (VQIDS-C5) and Self-Report (VQIDS-SR5) Versions of the Very Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptoms.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Rush, A John|0000-0003-2004-2382

pubs.begin-page

289

pubs.end-page

302

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

pubs.organisational-group

School of Medicine

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

18

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