Cross-Cultural Adaptation and Clinical Validation of the Mini Sarcopenia Risk Assessment Questionnaire in Community- Dwelling Spanish Older Adults
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Moreno-Sánchez, Inés; Aibar-Almazán, Agustín; Carcelén-Fraile, María del Carmen; Parra-Díaz, Ana Belén; Sánchez-Montesinos García, Indalecio; Sánchez-Alcalá, Marcelina; Cano-Sánchez, Javier; Hita Contreras, FidelEditorial
MDPI
Materia
sarcopenia screening reliability
Fecha
2024-09-25Referencia bibliográfica
Moreno Sánchez, I. et. al. Diagnostics 2024, 14, 2123. [https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics14192123]
Resumen
(1) Background: The aim was to analyze the reliability and validity of the Spanish version of
the Mini Sarcopenia Risk Assessment (MSRA) in older adults. (2) Methods: A total of 136 participants
(72.24 ± 5.21 years, 68.38% women) took part in the study. The MSRA includes two questionnaires
with seven (MSRA-7) and five items (MSRA-5). First, reliability (inter-rater and test–retest) of the
Spanish MSRA was studied, and then the total scores were compared with the presence of sarcopenia
according to three different diagnostic criteria and with other parameters related to sarcopenia
(clinical validation). (3) Results: The analysis showed excellent inter-rater and test–retest reliability.
As for the clinical validation, and regardless of the criteria, both questionnaires had a high sensitivity
(81.82–88.89% for the MSRA-5 and 90.91–94.44% for the MSRA-7), while the MSRA-5 showed a better
specificity (32.00–33.90%) than the MSRA-7 (20.80–22.88%). Predictive positive values ranged from
9.57–17.02% (MSRA-5) and 9.17–15.54% (MSRA-7), while predictive negative values were high for
both the MSRA-5 (95.24%) and the MSRA-7 (96.30–96.43%). The accuracy was better for the MSRA-5
(36.03–41.18%) than the MSRA-7 (26.47–32.35%), as well as the area under the curve (0.67–0.76 vs.
0.65–0.73, respectively). Higher MSRA-5 and MSRA-7 total scores significantly correlated with
greater muscle strength, quantity and gait speed. (4) Conclusions: The adaptation of the Spanish
MSRA questionnaires was successfully performed, and they are reliable and clinically valid tools for
assessing sarcopenia.