Outcomes Validity and Reliability of the Modified Rankin Scale: Implications for Stroke Clinical Trials
Health Economics and Outcomes Research (United Kingdom)
Abstract
A Medline search was conducted to identify reports in the peer-reviewed medical literature (1957-2006) that provide information on the structure, validation, scoring, and psychometric properties of the mRS and its use in clinical trials. The selection of articles was based on defined criteria that included relevance, study design and use of appropriate statistical methods.
Of 224 articles identified by the literature search, 50 were selected for detailed assessment. Inter-rater reliability with the mRS is moderate and improves with structured interviews (kappa 0.56 versus 0.78); strong test-re-test reliability (kappa=0.81 to 0.95) has been reported. Numerous studies demonstrate the construct validity of the mRS by its relationships to physiological indicators such as stroke type, lesion size, perfusion and neurological impairment. Convergent validity between the mRS and other disability scales is well documented. Patient comorbidities and socioeconomic factors should be considered in properly applying and interpreting the mRS. Recent analyses suggest that randomized clinical trials of acute stroke treatments may require a smaller sample size if the mRS is used as a primary end point rather than the Barthel Index.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 14.14
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 70
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Modified Rankin Scale
- Stroke (engine)
- Reliability (semiconductor)
- Clinical trial
- MEDLINE
- Construct validity
- External validity