Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Questionnaire of Olfactory Disorders-Negative Statements (QOD-NS) is a valuable instrument in the measurement of olfactory-specific quality of life (QOL). In the clinical setting, patients can be overwhelmed with the time required to complete questionnaires. Our objective was to develop a brief version of the QOD-NS to streamline clinical care and research. METHODS: QOD-NS scores from 221 subjects were used to determine which subset of the 17 QOD-NS questions best correlated with total and subdomain QOD-NS scores. An initial pool of 11 questions was made by removing items with ρ < 0.80 to their respective subdomain scores. Next, 500 bootstrapped samples were taken. On each sampe, an all-subsets regression was performed with total QOD-NS scores and QOD-NS subdomain scores as the outcomes. From this, our "top" and "bottom" 10 subsets were identified based on mean r(2) value, representation in bootstrap analysis, and number of items. RESULTS: All of our top subsets had excellent correlation with total and subdomain QOD-NS scores (mean r(2) > 0.90). Our top choice has 7 total questions, is representative of all subdomains, has a mean r(2) = 0.92, and was represented in 323 of our 500 bootstrapped samples. The worst-performing subset has 5 items, mean r(2) = 0.81, and was represented in only 1 bootstrapped sample. CONCLUSIONS: Using less than half of the questions in the QOD-NS, excellent correlations with both total and domain-specific scores are achieved. A brief version of the QOD-NS may prove useful in future clinical and research settings.