A German version of the Oral Impacts of Daily Performances-reliability and validity

Clin Oral Investig. 2024 Jan 4;28(1):73. doi: 10.1007/s00784-023-05437-w.

Abstract

Objective: The Oral Impact of Daily Performances (OIDP) is a dental patient-reported outcome measure (dPROM) for the estimation of oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) and takes the frequency as well as the severity of problems into account; however, it is not available in German language. The aim of this study was, therefore, to evaluate the reliability and validity of the German version of the OIDP in patients of a private practice.

Material and methods: Translation of the original OIDP version was performed by a forward-backward process. Reliability was evaluated in terms of construct stability (test-retest) for the single items and the sum scores. The responsiveness to change in oral health status was assessed by pre- and post-treatment comparison, in addition. Validity was assessed as convergent validity in comparison with other dPROMs (OHIP-14; GOHAI) and objective dental findings.

Results: A total of 330 patients participated in this study (mean age: 42.0 (18.0)). The OHRQoL of the participants was relatively high (OIDP score 4.3 (SD 14.3), OHIP score 4.8 (SD 5.3), GOHAI score 54.2 (SD 5.4)). A moderate construct stability for the total OIDP-score (ICC 0.686) was found whilst reliability for the single items varied between 0.179 (social contact) to 0.559 (showing teeth). Significant correlations were found for OIDP and OHIP (p < 0.001; r = 0.361) and OIDP and GOHAI (p < 0.001; r = - 0.391) indicating moderate validity with a tendency to even stronger correlations for OIDP-s and OIDP-f (r ≥ 0.500).

Conclusions: The German version of the OIDP demonstrated sufficient reliability and validity. OIDP's general performance should be interpreted cautiously as the outcome was detected in a specifically healthy population.

Clinical relevance: The OIDP is yet the only dPROM that evaluates both severity as well as frequency which makes validation interesting regarding specific target populations.

Keywords: Assessment tool; Oral health–related quality of life; Reliability; Validity; dPROM.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Health Status*
  • Humans
  • Language
  • Quality of Life*
  • Reproducibility of Results

Substances

  • pyrachlostrobin