• Sleep medicine · Mar 2003

    Multicenter Study Comparative Study

    The Johns Hopkins telephone diagnostic interview for the restless legs syndrome: preliminary investigation for validation in a multi-center patient and control population.

    • Wayne A Hening, Richard P Allen, Stacey Thanner, Tinna Washburn, Debbie Heckler, Arthur S Walters, and Christopher J Earley.
    • Department of Neurology, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey/RW Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, NJ, USA. waheningmd@aol.com
    • Sleep Med. 2003 Mar 1; 4 (2): 137-41.

    Study ObjectivesTo develop and validate a telephone diagnostic interview (the Johns Hopkins telephone diagnostic interview for restless legs, abbreviated TDI) for diagnosis of the restless legs syndrome (RLS).Design And MethodsUsing the International RLS Study Group diagnostic criteria, specific questions were developed reflecting the diagnostic features of RLS. Seventy-five subjects (37 previously diagnosed RLS patients and 38 controls self-reported to be free of RLS) were interviewed by three expert interviewers blinded to each others' interviews and the patient's clinical status. The interviewers diagnosed each subject based on responses to the TDI.ResultsThe interviewers overall correctly diagnosed 72 of 75 individuals. Minimum interviewer sensitivity and specificity were 97 and 92%, respectively. The intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) was used to quantify inter-rater reliability for the three interviewers. The ICC for diagnosis was 0.95. The ICC calculated on other key items in the interview exceeded 0.80 in all cases. The patients were predominantly older individuals with long-standing RLS; 19 of them scored at the highest level of severity on the Johns Hopkins Restless Legs Severity Scale (JHRLSS). The interviewers had more difficulty with assessing the controls accurately, some of whom were probably incorrectly self-categorized as not having RLS.ConclusionsThe TDI is a sensitive, specific, and reliable instrument for diagnosing RLS by experienced interviewers in a brief, anonymous telephone encounter.

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