Objectives: Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (POTS) presents with a range of poorly delineated symptoms across several domains. There is an urgent need for standardized symptom reporting in POTS, but a lack of validated symptom burden instruments. Our aim was to evaluate the psychometric properties of two symptom burden measures: the Orthostatic Grading Scale (OGS) and the Symptom Screen for Small-Fiber Polyneuropathy (SSS), in patients under investigation for suspected POTS.
Design: Psychometric validation study.
Methods: Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) tested the factor structure of the SSS and OGS completed by 149 patients under investigation for POTS. Scale reliability and validity were assessed. The uni-dimensionality of the SSS was assessed through principal component analysis (PCA).
Results: CFA of the OGS revealed that a 1-factor structure had adequate fit. CFA of the SSS revealed that a 5-factor structure had generally appropriate fit supporting the originally proposed 5 factors (1: Gastrointestinal, 2: Somatosensory, 3: Miscellaneous, 4: Microvascular, and 5: Urological). In addition, the SSS demonstrated sufficient uni-dimensionality in the PCA, warranting use of a single total score. Omega coefficients of both measures indicated satisfactory internal reliability (0.668-0.931). Correlations with related constructs (distress (K10 score), r = 0.317-0.404, p < 0.001) and heart rate indices (with the OGS, r = 0.211-0.294, p < 0.05) suggested sound convergent and divergent validity.
Conclusions: Initial evidence suggests that the OGS and SSS have good psychometric properties for use in populations with suspected and confirmed POTS.
Keywords: Orthostatic symptoms; Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (POTS); Psychometric validation; Small-fiber neuropathy; Symptom burden; Symptom questionnaires.
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