Reproducibility of Hypermobility Assessment Scales for Children When Performed Using Telehealth versus In-Person Modes

Phys Occup Ther Pediatr. 2023;43(4):446-462. doi: 10.1080/01942638.2022.2151393. Epub 2022 Dec 8.

Abstract

Aims: Evaluate reproducibility of hypermobility assessments using in-person versus telehealth modes.

Methods: Hypermobility of 20 children (7-12 years) was evaluated using the Beighton Score, Upper Limb Hypermobility Assessment Tool (ULHAT), and Lower Limb Assessment Score (LLAS) via in-person and telehealth modes. Agreement between the two modes was examined using percentage of exact agreement (%EA and %EA ± 2), Limits of Agreement (LoA) and Smallest detectable change (SDC). Reliability was calculated using intra-class correlation coefficients (ICCs).

Results: Agreement between modes for total Scores was best for the Beighton (%EA = fair, %EA ± 2 = good), then the ULHAT (%EA = poor, %EA ± 2 = excellent), and LLAS (%EA = poor, %EA ± 2 = fair). Total scores for all scales showed wide LoA, large SDC (25-31%), and fair to good reliability (ICC = 0.54-0.61). Exact agreement for Generalized Joint Hypermobility classification was excellent for the Beighton (≥7/9 threshold) and fair for the ULHAT and LLAS (≥7/12 threshold). Percentage of individual test items with good/excellent agreement was highest for the Beighton (78%, 7/9 items), then the ULHAT (58%, 14/24) and LLAS (42%, 10/24).

Conclusion: Total Scores of hypermobility scales showed low exact agreement between in-person and telehealth, but fair-excellent agreement within two points. Classification using the Beighton ≥7/9 threshold was excellent. Research is recommended to increase accuracy of online assessments.

Keywords: Beighton Score; Lower Limb Assessment Score; Telehealth; Upper Limb Hypermobility Assessment Tool; children; hypermobility.

MeSH terms

  • Child
  • Humans
  • Joint Instability* / diagnosis
  • Lower Extremity
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Telemedicine*
  • Upper Extremity