Initial Psychometric Evaluation of the Barth Syndrome Symptom Assessment (BTHS-SA) for Adolescents and Adults in a Phase 2 Clinical Study
Chad Gwaltney, Alan Shields, Emily Love, Sarah Ollis, Jonathan Stokes, Iyar Mazar, Ethan Arenson, Anthony Aiudi, R. J. Wirth, Carrie Houts

TL;DR
This study evaluates a new questionnaire to assess symptoms in Barth syndrome patients, showing it is reliable and valid for measuring symptom severity.
Contribution
The paper introduces and validates the Barth Syndrome Symptom Assessment (BTHS-SA) as a reliable patient-reported outcome measure for BTHS.
Findings
The BTHS-SA showed promising internal consistency and test-retest reliability across symptom domains.
Strong correlations with other fatigue and symptom severity measures support the BTHS-SA's convergent validity.
The BTHS-SA may be a useful tool for evaluating treatment benefits in Barth syndrome patients.
Abstract
Barth syndrome (BTHS) is a rare, X-linked disorder that stems from mutations in the TAFAZZIN (TAZ) gene with varying disease severity among patients. The Barth Syndrome Symptom Assessment (BTHS-SA) is a patient-reported outcome questionnaire developed to assess BTHS symptom severity. The current study reflects the first exploration of the assessment’s psychometric performance. The BTHS-SA was administered in TAZPOWER, a phase 2, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study to evaluate daily subcutaneous injections of elamipretide in subjects with genetically confirmed BTHS. Descriptive and correlational analyses were used to assess the score distributions, reliability, and construct-related validity of BTHS-SA items and domains including a two-item (2 FS), three-item (3 FS), and four-item (4 FS) fatigue score, and a five-item myopathy score (5MS). Among the N = 12…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIon channel regulation and function · Genetics and Neurodevelopmental Disorders · Epilepsy research and treatment
