Preliminary development of a questionnaire to measure the extra-pulmonary symptoms of severe asthma

BMC Pulm Med. 2021 Nov 14;21(1):369. doi: 10.1186/s12890-021-01730-0.

Abstract

Background: Research into the effects of asthma treatments on the extra-pulmonary symptoms of severe asthma is limited by the absence of a suitable questionnaire. The aim was to create a questionnaire suitable for intervention studies by selecting symptoms that are statistically associated with asthma pathology and therefore may improve when pathology is reduced.

Methods: Patients attending a specialist asthma clinic completed the 65-item General Symptom Questionnaire (GSQ-65), a questionnaire validated for assessing symptoms of people with multiple medically unexplained symptoms. Lung function (FEV1%) and cumulative oral corticosteroids (OCS) calculated from maintenance dose plus exacerbations were obtained from clinic records. Pathology was represented by the two components of a principal component analysis (PCA) of FEV1% and OCS. LASSO regression was used to select symptoms that had high coefficients with these two principal components and occurred frequently in severe asthma.

Results: 100 patients provided data. PCA revealed two components, one where FEV1% and OCS were inversely related and another where they were directly related. LASSO regression revealed 39 symptoms with non-zero coefficients on one or more of the two principal components from which 16 symptoms were selected for the GSQ-A on the basis of magnitude of coefficient and frequency. Asthma symptoms measured by asthma control questionnaires were excluded. The GSQ-A correlated 0.33 and - 0.34 (p = 0.001) with the two principal components.

Conclusion: The GSQ-A assesses the frequency of 16 heterogenous non-respiratory symptoms that are associated with asthma severity using the statistical combination of FEV1% and OCS.

Keywords: Asthma; Fibromyalgia; Patient reported outcomes; Questionnaire; Symptoms.

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Aged, 80 and over
  • Asthma / physiopathology*
  • Female
  • Forced Expiratory Volume
  • Health Status Indicators*
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Surveys and Questionnaires*
  • Symptom Assessment / methods*