Sleep problems have a high prevalence and negative daytime consequences in adolescents. Current sleep measures for this age group have limitations. The Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS® ) developed sleep item banks for adults. In a previous validation study, these item banks were adapted to a shortened version for adolescents. The current study aimed to further explore the psychometric properties of the 11-item Sleep-Related Impairment and 23-item Sleep Disturbance item banks in Dutch adolescents. We investigated structural validity by testing item response theory assumptions and model fit; measurement invariance by performing differential item functioning analyses; performance as a computerized adaptive test; reliability by marginal reliability estimates and test-retest reliability (intraclass correlation coefficients and limits of agreement); and construct validity by hypothesis testing. Additionally, we provide mean values for the item banks. The study sample consisted of 1,046 adolescents (mean age 14.3 ± 1.6), including 1,013 high-school students and 33 sleep-clinic patients. The Sleep Disturbance-23 showed lack of unidimensionality, but had sufficient test-retest reliability, and could distinguish between adolescents with and without sleep or health issues. The Sleep-Related Impairment-11 showed sufficient unidimensionality and model fit and was thus tested as a computerized adaptive test, demonstrating an equal amount of reliable measures to the full item bank. Furthermore, the Sleep-Related Impairment-11 could distinguish between adolescents with and without sleep or health issues and test-retest reliability was moderate. The use of both item banks in the full form and the use of the Sleep-related Impairment-11 as a computer adaptive test is recommended.
Keywords: paediatric; questionnaire; reproducibility of results; teenager; validation.
© 2020 The Authors. Journal of Sleep Research published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Sleep Research Society.