Further psychometric validation of the BODY-Q: Ability to detect change following bariatric surgery weight gain and loss Journal Article


Authors: Klassen, A. F.; Cano, S. J.; Kaur, M.; Breitkopf, T.; Pusic, A. L.
Article Title: Further psychometric validation of the BODY-Q: Ability to detect change following bariatric surgery weight gain and loss
Abstract: Background: Recent systematic reviews have identified that current patient-reported outcome instruments have content limitations when used to measure change following bariatric surgery. The aim of this study was to measure change after bariatric surgery using the BODY-Q, a PRO instrument designed for weight loss and body contouring. Methods: The BODY-Q is composed of 18 independently functioning scales and an obesity-specific symptom checklist that measure appearance, health-related quality of life (HR-QOL) and experience of health-care. The sample for this study included patients who were exploring or seeking bariatric surgery in Hamilton (Canada) at the time of the BODY-Q field-test study and who agreed to further contact from the research team. These patients were invited to complete 12 BODY-Q scales and the symptom checklist between 7 June 2016 and 29 November 2016. Data were collected online (REDCap) and via postal surveys. Clinical change was measured using paired t-tests with effect sizes and standardized response means. Results: The survey was completed by 58 of 89 (65%) pre-bariatric participants from the original BODY-Q field-test sample. The non-participants did not differ from participants in terms of age, gender, ethnicity, BMI or initial BODY-Q scale scores. Participants who had undergone bariatric surgery had a mean BMI of 49 (SD=7) at time 1 and 35 (SD=7) at time 2. Time since bariatric surgery was on average 2years (SD=0.5) (range 0.4 to 3years). Percentage total weight loss ranged from 12 to 51 (mean 31, SD=9). The difference in the proportion of patients to report an obesity-specific symptom on the BODY-Q checklist was significantly lower at follow-up for 5 of 10 symptoms. Participants improved on BODY-Q scales measuring appearance (of abdomen, back, body, buttocks, hips/outer thighs, inner thigh), body image and physical function (p<0.001 on paired t-tests) and social function (p=0.002 on paired t-test). These changes were associated with moderate to large effect sizes (0.60 to 2.29) and standardized response means (0.47 to 1.35). Conclusions: The BODY-Q provides a set of independently functioning scales that measure issues important to patients who undergo weight loss. BODY-Q scales were responsive to measuring clinical change associated with weight loss 2years after bariatric surgery. © 2017 The Author(s).
Keywords: child; human tissue; preschool child; validation process; follow up; quality of life; obesity; weight reduction; social status; body mass; abdomen; thigh; satisfaction; patient-reported outcomes; gender; personal experience; canada; ethnicity; body image; student t test; weight gain; checklist; effect size; patient-reported outcome; appearance; responsiveness; bariatric surgery; buttock; hip; human; male; female; body-q; clinical change
Journal Title: Health and Quality of Life Outcomes
Volume: 15
ISSN: 1477-7525
Publisher: Biomed Central Ltd  
Date Published: 2017-11-25
Start Page: 227
Language: English
DOI: 10.1186/s12955-017-0802-x
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC5702178
PUBMED: 29178962
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 2 January 2018 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Andrea Pusic
    300 Pusic