Translation and transcultural adaptation of Pain Quality Assessment Scale (PQAS) to Brazilian version


Abstract:

Introduction: most cancer patients are treated with chemotherapy, and peripheral neuropathy is a serious and common clinical problem affecting patients undergoing cancer treatment. However, the symptoms are subjective and underdiagnosed by health professionals. Thus, it becomes necessary to develop self-report instruments to overcome this limitation and improve the patient's perception about his medical condition or treatment. Objective: translate and culturally adapt the Brazilian version of the Pain Quality Assessment Scale (PQAs), constituting a useful tool for assessing the quality of neuropathic pain in cancer patients. Method: the procedure followed the steps of translation, back translation, analysis of Portuguese and English versions by a committee of judges, and pretest. Pretest was conducted with 30 cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy following internationally recommended standards, and the final versions were compared and evaluated by a committee of researchers from Brazil and MAPI Research Trust, the scale's creators. Results: versions one and two showed 100% semantic equivalence with the original version. Back-translation showed difference between the linguistic translation and the original version. After evaluation by the committee of judges, a flaw was found in the empirical equivalence and idiomatic equivalence. In pretest, two people did not understand the item 12 of the scale, without interfering in the final elaboration. Conclusion: the translated and culturally adapted instrument is now presented in this publication, and currently it is in the process of clinical validation in Brazil.

Año de publicación:

2016

Keywords:

  • Self-report instruments
  • chemotherapy
  • Cross-cultural adaptation
  • translation
  • neuropathy

Fuente:

scopusscopus

Tipo de documento:

Article

Estado:

Acceso abierto

Áreas de conocimiento:

  • Dolor

Áreas temáticas:

  • Lingüística
  • Inglés e inglés antiguo (anglosajón)
  • Otras lenguas