Report Viewer

NINDS CDE Notice of Copyright
Problem%20Behaviours%20Assessment%20HD%20-%20Short%20Version%20(PBA-s)
Availability
Please email the author for information about obtaining the instrument: David Crauford, david.craufurd@manchester.ac.uk
Classification
Supplemental: Huntington's Disease (HD) and Mitochondrial Disease (Mito)
Short Description of Instrument
Summary/Overview of Instrument:
Brief semi-structured interview covering the most common behavioral and psychiatric manifestations of HD.
 
Construct measured:
The interview is not restricted to a single construct, but rather covers several broad symptom domains (affect, irritability, loss of motivation, perseverative phenomena, and psychotic symptoms) relevant to HD.
 
Intended use of instrument/purpose of tool:
Cross-sectional or longitudinal studies. The interview is focused on symptoms rather than diagnoses and does not make assumptions about the diagnostic significance of these symptoms in the presence of organic brain disease (i.e., HD).
 
Means of administration: Face to face semi-structured interview. The suggested approach is to complete the Problem Behaviours Assessment for HD - Short Version (PBA-s) with the companion and participant together. After completing the scale, the interviewer should speak with the companion without the participant present.
 
Location of administration: Clinic or home.
 
Intended respondent: Participant and knowledgeable informant (e.g., spouse or caregiver) together; the informant should be briefly re-interviewed afterwards to elicit any additional information which could not be discussed openly in presence of the participant.
 
# of items: 11 items (low mood, suicidal ideation, anxiety, irritability, anger/aggressive behavior, loss of motivation, perseverative thinking or behavior, obsessive-compulsive behaviors, paranoid thinking, hallucinations, behavior suggestive of disorientation).
 
# of subscales and names of sub-scales: The PBA-s has not been formally divided into subscales; however, principal components analysis of data obtained with the original 40-item Problem Behaviours Assessment for HD (PBA-HD) in both English (Craufurd et al., 2001) and Dutch (Kingma et al., 2007) translations identified three main factors corresponding to affective symptoms, irritability, and apathy, respectively. It would therefore be reasonable to add the scores for low mood, suicidal ideation, and anxiety to create a single 'affect' score, and to add the scores for irritability and anger to create a composite 'irritability and aggression' score, as was done in the TRACK-HD study (Tabrizi et al., 2009).
 
Administration Time: 20-25 minutes.
 
Translations available: Available in English, Dutch, French, German, Norwegian and Spanish versions. Translation into other European languages in progress.
Scoring and Psychometric Properties
Scoring: Each symptom is rated for severity on a 5-point scale according to detailed scoring criteria which roughly correspond to the following: 0 = "not at all"; 1 = trivial; 2 = mild; 3 = moderate (disrupting everyday activities) and 4 = severe or intolerable. Each symptom is also scored for frequency on a 5-point scale as follows: 0 = symptom absent; 1 = less than once weekly; 2 = at least once a week; 3 = most days (up to and including some part of everyday); and 4 = all day, every day. Severity and frequency scores are multiplied to produce an overall 'PBA score' for each symptom. Although it would be possible to sum the individual PBA symptom scores to derive an overall total score, it is unlikely that this is very meaningful.
 
Standardization of scores to a reference population (z scores, T scores, etc.): Not applicable.
 
Psychometric Properties:
Test-retest or intra-interview (within rater) reliability (as applicable): N/A.
 
Inter-interview (between-rater) reliability (as applicable): Inter-rater reliability was measured in the TRACK-HD study by video-recording interviews and re-scoring of a random sample by an expert rater. Overall unweighted kappa scores for the severity ratings were 0.70 and for the frequency ratings, 0.77. Kappa scores in the range 0.61-0.80 are usually considered to represent 'substantial agreement'.
 
Internal consistency: N/A.
 
Statistical methods used to assess reliability: Cohen's kappa.
 
Validity:
Difficult to assess because of the lack of an alternative 'gold standard' measure. The selection of symptoms for inclusion in the measure, and the development of the detailed scoring criteria used, were conducted by a group of experts from the EHDN Behavioural Phenotype Working Group. The range of symptoms covered by the measure is very similar to the behavioral section of the UHDRS, and the PBA-s is probably best thought of as the latest elaboration of the UHDRS behavioral interview.
 
Sensitivity to Change/ Ability to Detect Change (over time or in response to an intervention):
The longitudinal rate of change in PBA-s apathy scores over 24 months' follow-up was significantly greater in manifest HD participants than in control participants (Tabrizi et al., 2012). See Tabrizi et al. (2013) for analysis of the TRACK-HD 36-month longitudinal data.
 
Known Relationships to Other Variables:
A paper describing relationships between PBA-s scores and those obtained using other symptom-specific measures in the TRACK-HD study is in preparation.
 
Diagnostic Sensitivity and Specificity, if applicable (in general population, HD population- premanifest/ manifest, other disease groups):
Developed for use with manifest HD population.
Rationale/Justification
Strengths: Obvious face validity (semi-structured interview covering the same core behavioral symptoms as the UHDRS behavioral section); demonstrated excellent inter-rater reliability in TRACK-HD study; suitable for use by all professionals familiar with HD (physician, psychologist, study nurse, etc.).
 
Weaknesses: Investment of staff time for 25-minute interview; some training required.
References
Key Reference:
Callaghan J, Stopford C, Arran N, Boisse MF, Coleman A, Santos RD, Dumas EM, Hart EP, Justo D, Owen G, Read J, Say MJ, Durr A, Leavitt BR, Roos RA, Tabrizi SJ, Bachoud-Levi AC, Bourdet C, van Duijn E, Craufurd D. Reliability and factor structure of the Short Problem Behaviors Assessment for Huntington's disease (PBA-s) in the TRACK-HD and REGISTRY studies. J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci. 2015 Winter;27(1):59-64.
 
Additional References:
Craufurd D, Thompson JC, Snowden JS. Behavioral changes in Huntington Disease. Neuropsychiatry Neuropsychol Behav Neurol. 2001 Oct-Dec;14(4):219-26.
 
Kingma EM, van Duijn E, Timman R, van der Mast RC, Roos RA. Behavioural problems in Huntington's disease using the Problem Behaviours Assessment. Gen Hosp Psychiatry. 2008 Mar-Apr;30(2):155-61.
 
McNally G, Rickards H, Horton M, Craufurd D. Exploring the Validity of the Short Version of the Problem Behaviours Assessment (PBA-s) for Huntington's disease: A Rasch Analysis. J Huntingtons Dis. 2015;4(4):347-69.
 
Ruiz-Idiago JM, Floriach M, Mareca C, Salvador R, Lopez-Sendon JL, Mananes V, Cubo E, Mariscal N, Munoz E, Santacruz P, Noguera MF, Vivancos L, Roy P, Pomarol-Clotet E, Sarro S; Spanish Huntington Disease Network. Spanish Validation of the Problem Behaviors Assessment-Short (PBA-s) for Huntington's Disease. J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci. 2017 Winter;29(1):31-8.
 
Tabrizi SJ, Langbehn DR, Leavitt BR, Roos RA, Durr A, Craufurd D, Kennard C, Hicks SL, Fox NC, Scahill RI, Borowsky B, Tobin AJ, Rosas HD, Johnson H, Reilmann R, Landwehrmeyer B, Stout JC; TRACK-HD investigators. Biological and clinical manifestations of Huntington's disease in the longitudinal TRACK-HD study: cross-sectional analysis of baseline data. Lancet Neurol. 2009 Sep;8(9):791-801.
 
Tabrizi SJ, Reilmann R, Roos RA, Durr A, Leavitt B, Owen G, Jones R, Johnson H, Craufurd D, Hicks SL, Kennard C, Landwehrmeyer B, Stout JC, Borowsky B, Scahill RI, Frost C, Langbehn DR; TRACK-HD investigators. Potential endpoints for clinical trials in premanifest and early Huntington's disease in the TRACK-HD study: analysis of 24 month observational data. Lancet Neurol. 2012 Jan;11(1):42-53.
 
Tabrizi SJ, Scahill RI, Owen G, Durr A, Leavitt BR, Roos RA, Borowsky B, Landwehrmeyer B, Frost C, Johnson H, Craufurd D, Reilmann R, Stout JC, Langbehn DR; TRACK-HD Investigators. Predictors of phenotypic progression and disease onset in premanifest and early-stage Huntington's disease in the TRACK-HD study: analysis of 36-month observational data. Lancet Neurol. 2013 Jul;12(7):637-49.
 
Document last updated March 2024