Neuropsychiatric Symptoms Assessment: Cross-cultural Adaptation and Validation of the Portuguese Abe's BPSD Score (ABS)

Clin Gerontol. 2022 May-Jun;45(3):591-605. doi: 10.1080/07317115.2021.1873881. Epub 2021 Jan 25.

Abstract

Objectives: This study aims to report on the development and psychometric properties of the Portuguese-language Abe's BPSD score (ABS) to screen for neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS).

Methods: ISPOR and COSMIN recommendations were followed to translate and culturally adapt the ABS. A validation study was conducted to assess the psychometric properties of the newly-translated instrument. Outpatients attending a psychogeriatric consultation were included by consecutive referrals and were assessed with the ABS, the Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) and NPI Caregiver Distress scale (NPI-D), and the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE). The ABS reliability (internal consistency, item-total correlations, inter-rater and test-retest reliability), validity (concurrent and convergent), feasibility and diagnostic accuracy were examined.

Results: Overall, 107 participants were included. The ABS Cronbach alpha was 0.672, and item-total correlations ranged from -0.056 to 0.546. Strong inter-rater (ICC 0.997; 95%CI: 0.995-0.999) and test-retest reliability (ICC 0.976; 95%CI: 0.958-0.986) were found. Concurrent validity with NPI was high (rs = 0.847, p < .001), and correlations with MMSE and NPI-D were also significant. An exploratory threshold score ≥2 is proposed to identify clinically relevant NPS.

Conclusions: Data provide satisfactory proof of ABS psychometric characteristics. Nevertheless, some items exhibited less optimal properties.

Clinical implications: The newly-translated instrument proved to be relevant, valid and easy to use in a real geriatric clinical setting.

Keywords: Neuropsychiatric symptoms; cross-cultural adaptation; dementia; measurement; validation study.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Caregivers / psychology
  • Cross-Cultural Comparison*
  • Humans
  • Language*
  • Portugal / epidemiology
  • Reproducibility of Results