Literature DB >> 24844220

Development of the measure of ovarian symptoms and treatment concerns: aiming for optimal measurement of patient-reported symptom benefit with chemotherapy for symptomatic ovarian cancer.

Madeleine T King1, Martin R Stockler, Phyllis Butow, Rachel O'Connell, Merryn Voysey, Amit M Oza, Kim Gillies, Heidi S Donovan, Rebecca Mercieca-Bebber, Julie Martyn, Katrin Sjoquist, Michael L Friedlander.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to determine the optimal patient-reported outcome measure (PROM) for assessing symptom benefit in trials of palliative chemotherapy for women with symptomatic ovarian cancer.
METHODS: Candidate PROMs were EORTC QLQ-C30 plus ovarian-specific QLQ-OV28, Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Ovarian (FACT-O), FACT Ovarian Symptom Index (FOSI), and gynecologic cancer-specific Symptom Representation Questionnaire. Predefined optimality criteria were inclusion of all symptoms necessary for the specified purpose, recall period covering typical length of palliative chemotherapy, numerical item rating scales, and all necessary symptoms included in a single symptom index. Qualitative and quantitative methods were applied to data from stage 1 of the Gynecologic Cancer Intergroup Symptom Benefit Study to determine the set of necessary symptoms and to objectively assess candidate PROMs against the optimality criteria.
RESULTS: Ten necessary symptoms were identified: pain, fatigue, abdominal bloating/discomfort, sleep disturbance, bowel disturbance, nausea and vomiting, shortness of breath, poor appetite, urinary symptoms, and weight changes. Although QLQ-C30 and QLQ-OV28 together cover all these symptoms, they split them into numerous scales, dissipating potential symptom-benefit signal. Conversely, FACT-O does not cover all necessary symptoms and contains many other HRQoL-related items and treatment side effects, diluting potential symptom-benefit signal when summed into scales. Item response scales and composite scoring of all candidate PROMs were suboptimal to our specific purpose. We therefore developed a new PROM, the Measure of Ovarian Symptoms and Treatment (MOST) concerns, to provide optimal measurement for the specified purpose.
CONCLUSIONS: This article documents the development of the MOST, a new PROM designed to assess patient-reported benefits and burden as end points in clinical trials of palliative chemotherapy for women with symptomatic ovarian cancer. The validity, reliability, and statistical efficiency of the MOST, relative to the best candidate scales of existing PROMs, will be assessed in the stage 2 of Gynecologic Cancer Intergroup Symptom Benefit Study.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24844220     DOI: 10.1097/IGC.0000000000000167

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Gynecol Cancer        ISSN: 1048-891X            Impact factor:   3.437


  12 in total

1.  Coping strategies, trajectories, and their associations with patient-reported outcomes among women with ovarian cancer.

Authors:  Vanessa L Beesley; David D Smith; Christina M Nagle; Michael Friedlander; Peter Grant; Anna DeFazio; Penelope M Webb
Journal:  Support Care Cancer       Date:  2018-06-12       Impact factor: 3.603

2.  Quality-of-life outcomes in patients with gynecologic cancer referred to integrative oncology treatment during chemotherapy.

Authors:  Eran Ben-Arye; Noah Samuels; Elad Schiff; Orit Gressel Raz; Ilanit Shalom Sharabi; Ofer Lavie
Journal:  Support Care Cancer       Date:  2015-03-10       Impact factor: 3.603

3.  Fifth Ovarian Cancer Consensus Conference of the Gynecologic Cancer InterGroup: recurrent disease.

Authors:  M K Wilson; E Pujade-Lauraine; D Aoki; M R Mirza; D Lorusso; A M Oza; A du Bois; I Vergote; A Reuss; M Bacon; M Friedlander; D Gallardo-Rincon; F Joly; S-J Chang; A M Ferrero; R J Edmondson; P Wimberger; J Maenpaa; D Gaffney; R Zang; A Okamoto; G Stuart; K Ochiai
Journal:  Ann Oncol       Date:  2017-04-01       Impact factor: 32.976

4.  A Systematic Review of Health-Related Quality of Life Reporting in Ovarian Cancer Phase III Clinical Trials: Room to Improve.

Authors:  Michelle K Wilson; Michael L Friedlander; Florence Joly; Amit M Oza
Journal:  Oncologist       Date:  2017-11-08

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Authors:  John Y Shin; Sani H Kizilbash; Steven I Robinson; Joon H Uhm; Julie E Hammack; Daniel H Lachance; Jan C Buckner; Aminah Jatoi
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  2016-03-15       Impact factor: 4.130

Review 6.  The patient-reported outcome content of international ovarian cancer randomised controlled trial protocols.

Authors:  Rebecca Mercieca-Bebber; Michael Friedlander; Peey-Sei Kok; Melanie Calvert; Derek Kyte; Martin Stockler; Madeleine T King
Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  2016-06-13       Impact factor: 4.147

7.  Measuring what matters MOST: validation of the Measure of Ovarian Symptoms and Treatment, a patient-reported outcome measure of symptom burden and impact of chemotherapy in recurrent ovarian cancer.

Authors:  Madeleine T King; Martin R Stockler; Rachel L O'Connell; Luke Buizen; Florence Joly; Anne Lanceley; Felix Hilpert; Aikou Okamoto; Eriko Aotani; Jane Bryce; Paul Donnellan; Amit Oza; Elisabeth Avall-Lundqvist; Jonathan S Berek; Jalid Sehouli; Amanda Feeney; Dominique Berton-Rigaud; Daniel S J Costa; Michael L Friedlander
Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  2017-12-16       Impact factor: 4.147

Review 8.  Sleep and gynecological cancer outcomes: opportunities to improve quality of life and survival.

Authors:  Caroline Zhao; Allison Grubbs; Emma L Barber
Journal:  Int J Gynecol Cancer       Date:  2022-05-03       Impact factor: 4.661

9.  Quality of life with cediranib in relapsed ovarian cancer: The ICON6 phase 3 randomized clinical trial.

Authors:  Dan P Stark; Adrian Cook; Julia M Brown; Michael D Brundage; Andrew C Embleton; Richard S Kaplan; Fharat A Raja; Ann Marie W Swart; Galina Velikova; Wendi Qian; Jonathan A Ledermann
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2017-03-24       Impact factor: 6.860

10.  Preference of elderly patients' to oral or intravenous chemotherapy in heavily pre-treated recurrent ovarian cancer: final results of a prospective multicenter trial.

Authors:  Radoslav Chekerov; Philipp Harter; Stefan Fuxius; Lars Christian Hanker; Linn Woelber; Lothar Müller; Peter Klare; Wolfgang Abenhardt; Yoana Nedkova; Isil Yalcinkaya; Georg Heinrich; Harald Sommer; Sven Mahner; Pauline Wimberger; Dominique Koensgen-Mustea; Rolf Richter; Gülten Oskay-Oezcelik; Jalid Sehouli
Journal:  Gynecol Oncol Res Pract       Date:  2017-03-07
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