Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinical management of tinnitus remains challenging due to unclear etiology and diverse phenotypic manifestations. To quantify its associated burden, a variety of patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) are used. This study aims to comprehensively evaluate the content overlap of items between eight PROMs commonly used in tinnitus research. METHODS: A two-stage, blinded multi-rater process was used to analyze the content of all 199 items from the International Tinnitus Inventory (ITI), Subjective Tinnitus Severity Scale (STSS), Tinnitus Functional Index (TFI), Tinnitus Handicap Inventory (THI), Tinnitus Handicap Questionnaire (THQ), Tinnitus Primary Function Questionnaire (TPFQ), Tinnitus Questionnaire (TQ), and Tinnitus Reaction Questionnaire (TRQ). The Jaccard Index was used to measure pairwise content overlap between scales. RESULTS: The analysis revealed 83 distinct symptoms. "Concentration" was the most frequently captured symptom (in seven scales), whereas 41 symptoms (49.4%) were unique to one scale. The TQ exhibited the highest number of unique symptoms (52.5%), while the THI had the least (4%). The Jaccard Index identified very weak/weak scale overlap between the PROMs. The highest overlap was observed between TFI and THI (0.35). The TFI had the highest mean overlap (0.26), coming closest to the content measured by all other PROMs. CONCLUSION: The results demonstrate high heterogeneity and limited content overlap among tinnitus burden PROMs, similar to other conditions. The findings suggest that tinnitus burden is not measured as a unified construct across questionnaires, thus, researchers and clinicians should carefully consider the specific symptoms measured when selecting instruments for treatment evaluation and comparison.