Abstract
To evaluate the motor experiences of daily living section of the Movement Disorders Society-Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS M-EDL) for assessing disability in PD patients; to determine the association between disability and quality of life; and to identify cut-off score ranges for no, mild, moderate and severe disability with this measure.
International, observational, cross-sectional study of 435 PD patients, assessed with: MDS-UPDRS, Hoehn and Yahr staging, Rapid Assessment of Disability Scale, Clinical Impression of Severity Index for PD, Parkinson's Disease Questionnaire-8 and EQ-5D. Descriptive statistics, Spearman's rank correlation coefficients, Kruskal–Wallis test for group comparisons, ordinal logistic regression analysis for setting cut-off values and a step-wise multiple linear regression model were calculated.
MDS-UPDRS M-EDL correlated 0.70–0.80 with other disability measures, and −0.46 to 0.74 with quality of life scales. Scores significantly increased with higher disease duration and severity (p < 0.001). Cut-off values for the M-EDL were: 0–2 points, no disability; 3–16, mild; 17–31, moderate; and 32 points or more, severe. Linear regression analysis identified the MDS-UPDRS nM-EDL section as the main determinant of M-EDL, followed by the rest of MDS-UPDRS sections (explained variance: 59%).
MDS-UPDRS M-EDL proved to be useful for assessing disability in PD.