# Development and Validation of the Korean Version of the Rett Syndrome Behavioral Questionnaire

**Authors:** You Gyoung Yi, Seoyon Yang, Ga Hye Kim, Yunju Han, Dae-Hyun Jang

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/children13010093 · 2026-01-08

## TL;DR

The Korean version of the Rett Syndrome Behavior Questionnaire (K-RSBQ) is a reliable and culturally adapted tool for assessing behavioral and neurological features in Korean children with Rett syndrome.

## Contribution

The study developed and validated a Korean version of the RSBQ, ensuring its reliability and cultural appropriateness for Korean caregivers.

## Key findings

- The K-RSBQ showed high internal consistency and acceptable test–retest reliability among primary caregivers.
- The K-RSBQ demonstrated expected correlations with the Childhood Autism Rating Scale (CARS), particularly in mood-related domains.
- Caregivers reported minimal difficulty in understanding the questionnaire items.

## Abstract

What are the main findings?
The Korean version of the Rett Syndrome Behavior Questionnaire (K-RSBQ) showed high internal consistency and acceptable test–retest reliability in primary caregivers.K-RSBQ demonstrated expected patterns of correlation with the Childhood Autism Rating Scale (CARS), with moderate association in mood-related domains.

The Korean version of the Rett Syndrome Behavior Questionnaire (K-RSBQ) showed high internal consistency and acceptable test–retest reliability in primary caregivers.

K-RSBQ demonstrated expected patterns of correlation with the Childhood Autism Rating Scale (CARS), with moderate association in mood-related domains.

What are the implications of the main findings?
K-RSBQ can serve as a reliable and culturally adapted tool for evaluating behavioral and neurological features in Korean children with Rett syndrome.The findings support the use of K-RSBQ in clinical and research settings, particularly when assessments are conducted by primary caregivers.

K-RSBQ can serve as a reliable and culturally adapted tool for evaluating behavioral and neurological features in Korean children with Rett syndrome.

The findings support the use of K-RSBQ in clinical and research settings, particularly when assessments are conducted by primary caregivers.

Background/Objectives: The Rett Syndrome Behavior Questionnaire (RSBQ) is a widely used caregiver-reported instrument for assessing behavioral and neurological features of Rett syndrome (RTT). However, a validated Korean version has not been available. This study aimed to translate the RSBQ into Korean (K-RSBQ) and to evaluate its psychometric properties in a Korean RTT population. Methods: The RSBQ was translated and back-translated using standardized procedures and refined through a Delphi process. Primary caregivers of individuals with clinically diagnosed RTT completed an online survey including the K-RSBQ and the Childhood Autism Rating Scale (CARS). Test–retest reliability was assessed in a subset of caregivers who completed the questionnaire twice within one week, and inter-rater reliability was evaluated when an additional caregiver was available. Results: Sixty-six primary caregivers participated. The K-RSBQ demonstrated high internal consistency for the total score (Cronbach’s α = 0.912) and moderate-to-high consistency across most subscales. Test–retest reliability for the total score was moderate (weighted κ = 0.594), while inter-rater reliability between primary and secondary caregivers was generally low. The hand behavior subscale showed low and non-significant test–retest reliability. The K-RSBQ total score exhibited a low-to-moderate correlation with the CARS total score, and the general mood subscale showed a moderate correlation with the CARS emotional response item. Caregivers reported minimal difficulty in understanding the questionnaire items. Conclusions: The K-RSBQ demonstrates acceptable internal consistency and test–retest reliability when administered to primary caregivers, with preliminary evidence supporting its construct validity. Although limitations exist regarding criterion validation and inter-rater agreement, the K-RSBQ represents a feasible and culturally adapted tool for assessing RTT-related behavioral features in Korean clinical and research settings.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Rett syndrome (MONDO:0010726)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** RTT (MESH:D015518), Autism (MESH:D001321)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12840276