Mg. Liu et al., COMORBIDITY MEASURES FOR STROKE OUTCOME RESEARCH - A PRELIMINARY-STUDY, Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation, 78(2), 1997, pp. 166-172
Objective: To develop standardized comorbidity measures for use in str
oke outcome research. Design: Retrospective review of medical records
to analyze comorbidities and to study reliability and validity of the
newly developed measures, comorbidity index (CI), and weighted comorbi
dity index (w-CI). Setting: Tertiary rehabilitation center in Japan. P
atients: 106 stroke patients, age 56.5 +/- 13.2yr, admitted and discha
rged during the year from May 1994 to December 1995. The median days o
f duration of stroke, onset to admission, and length of stay (LOS) wer
e 199, 83, and 105.5, respectively. The median admission and discharge
Functional Independence Measure (FIM) raw scores were 85 and 110, res
pectively. Main Outcome Measures: Assessment of interrater reliability
with intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) for total scores and we
ighted kappa for subscores; assessment of concurrent validity by relat
ing the measures to Charlson's comorbidity index, total numbers of med
ications, laboratory studies, therapeutic interventions, consultations
, and days of interruption (Spearman's rank correlation method); study
of predictive validity with discharge FIM score and LOS as dependent
variables. Results: The ICCs were .896 for CI and .997 for w-CI, and w
eighed kappa ranged from .615 to 1.00. CI and w-CI correlated signific
antly with Charlson index and the above indices of validity. They also
correlated negatively with discharge FIM scores and positively with L
OS. With stepwise multiple regression analysis, 79.8% of the variance
of discharge FIM scores could be explained by w-CI, days from onset to
admission, admission FIM score, and deviation in tape bisection task.
Conclusion: The newly developed comorbidity measures are reliable and
valid for use in stroke outcome research. (C) 1997 bg the American Co
ngress of Rehabilitation Medicine and the American Academy of Physical
Medicine and Rehabilitation.