OBJECTIVE: This study aims to evaluate the short form International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ) for use in women with chronic pelvic pain disorders (CPPDs) by comparing its scores against objectively-estimated physical activity (PA) outcomes. We investigated IPAQ components that are most consistently predictive of habitual PA behavior. METHOD: The study sample included 966 weeks of data from 112 women with CPPDs who enrolled in a 14-week mHealth-based self-tracking study. Participants wore Fitbit devices and completed the IPAQ every week. We compared the IPAQ-reported minutes of walking, total activity, sitting, light-, moderate-, and vigorous intensity PA for concordance and divergence against their corresponding Fitbit estimates. We used linear mixed-effects regression models (MLMs) for all analyses and quantified the between-participant variance in the magnitude of agreement between the two methods via random slope terms. We further evaluated temporal consistency in scores using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs). RESULTS: IPAQ-reported walking minutes were strongly associated with Fitbit step counts (B = 3952.36
p = 0.006), minutes of moderate PA (B = 15.498
p = 0.0113), and moderate-to-vigorous PA (MVPA
B = 28.973
p = 0.007). IPAQ total activity minutes were associated with Fitbit minutes of vigorous PA (B = 15.183
p = 0.007) and MVPA (B = 25.658
p = 0.010). IPAQ moderate activity minutes were predictive of Fitbit vigorous PA minutes (B = 9.060
SE = 3.719
p = 0.0151). There was substantial between-individual variance in these point estimates based on the significant random-effect terms, and average weekly PA level was a significant moderator of the association between IPAQ-reported and Fitbit-estimated scores for these variables. IPAQ-reported sitting minutes were inversely associated with Fitbit step counts (B = - 3125.61
p = 0.004), and minutes of MVPA (B = -21.848
p = 0.007), vigorous AP (B = -10.854
p = 0.042), and moderate PA (B = -10.985
p = 0.004). CONCLUSION: These findings provide support for using IPAQ-reported walking and total activity minutes to monitor several PA domains in women with CPPDs, given their concordance with several tracker-estimated PA outcomes. However, the item on "sitting time" may not be a suitable for assessing sedentary time.