| Literature DB >> 30456713 |
M S Salek1, T Ionova2, J R Johns3, E N Oliva4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Pyruvate kinase deficiency (PKD) is a rare disease and understanding of its epidemiology and associated burden remains limited. With no current curative therapy, clinical manifestations can be life threatening, clinically managed by maintaining adequate hemoglobin levels through transfusion and subsequent support, but with frequent complications. Treatment goals are to maintain/improve the patient's quality of life. With new therapies, reliable, valid, and relevant patient-reported outcome (PRO) tools are required for use in clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: PRO; Patient-reported outcome; Pyruvate kinase deficiency; Quality of life
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30456713 PMCID: PMC6373289 DOI: 10.1007/s11136-018-2025-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Qual Life Res ISSN: 0962-9343 Impact factor: 4.147
Key terms used for literature searches
| Block 1 | Pyruvate kinase deficiency |
| Block 2 | Quality of life; functional status; health status; functional impairment; functional limitations; activities of daily living |
Fig. 1Flow diagram of studies in the literature review process, for the revised searches based on conditions analogous to pyruvate kinase deficiency
Fig. 2Pyruvate kinase deficiency physico-psychosocial model
Similarities and differences in conceptual coverage of health-related quality of life instruments used in diseases analogous to PK deficiency
| Health status/HRQoL domains/symptoms | WHOQOL-Bref [ | SF-36v2 [ | EORTC QLQ C30 [ | CHQ [ | PedsQL [ | PedsQL MFS [ | PedsFACIT-F [ | PedsQL SCD [ | ASCQ-Me [ | FROM-16 [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physical well-being | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● |
| ● | |||
| Psychological distress | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ||||
| Impact on daily activities | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ||||
| Impact on school/productivity | ● | ● | ||||||||
| Impact on work/productivity | ● | ● | ● | |||||||
| Impact on self-image | ● | ● | ● | |||||||
| Impact on social life | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ||||
| Perceived general health/HRQoL | ● | ● | ● | ● | ||||||
| Cognitive impairment | ● | ● | ● | |||||||
| Family life impacts | ● | ● | ● | |||||||
| Fatigue | ● | ● | ● | ● | ||||||
| Shortness of breath | ● | |||||||||
| Pain (abdomen, chest, headache) | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ||||
| Sleep disturbance | ● | ● | ||||||||
| Depression | ● | ● | ● |
In general, a concept was considered to have been addressed by an item if there was at least 1 item addressing that concept in a particular PRO measure
SF-36 short-form medical outcome, WHOQOL-BREF WHO Quality of Life-BREF, FACT-An functional assessment of cancer therapy-anemia, FROM-16 Family-Reported Outcome Measure-16, PedsQL Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory, MFS Multidimensional Fatigue Scale, pedsFACIT-F pediatric Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Fatigue, CHQ Children’s Health Questionnaire, ASCQ-Me adult sickle cell quality of life measurement information system, FROM family-reported outcome measure
Evaluation of psychometric attributes of PRO measures
| Content validity | Construct validity | Internal consistency | Test–retest | Responsiveness | MCID | Respondent burden; completion time | Language translations | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SF-36 | 0 | ++ | ++ | 0 | + | 0 | Minimal; 5–10 min | > 170 countries |
| WHOQOL-BREF | ++ | ++ | ++ | + | 0 | 0 | Minimal; < 5 min | > 23 countries (cultural adaptations) |
| FACT-An | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | Minimal; 5–15 min | > 45 languagesa |
| EORTC QLQ C30 | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | Minimal 5–15 min | > 80 languages |
| FROM-16 | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | − | Minimal; < 3 min | 2 languages |
| PedsQL 4.0 Generic Core Scale | + | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | Minimal; < 4 min | > 21 languages |
| PedsQL 4.0 MFS | + | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | Minimal; < 4 min | > 21 languages |
| PedsQL SCD | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | Minimal; < 4 min | – |
| pedsFACIT-F | ++ | ++ | ++ | − | − | ++ | 5–10 min | – |
| CHQ | 0 | ++ | ++ | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5–15 min | > 72 languages |
| ASCQ-Me | ++ | ++ | ++ | − | − | − | ~ < 10 min | – |
SF-36 short-form medical outcome, WHOQOL-BREF WHO Quality of Life-BREF, FACT-An functional assessment of cancer therapy-anemia, EORTC QLQ C30 European Organisation for the Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire Core 30, FROM-16 Family-Reported Outcome Measure-16, PedsQL Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory, MFS Multidimensional Fatigue Scale, SCD sickle cell disease, pedsFACIT-F pediatric Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Fatigue, CHQ Children’s Health Questionnaire, ASCQ-Me adult sickle cell quality of life measurement information system, ++: adequate data available from PK-d analogous population, +: data are available from PK-d analogous population, although inadequate, 0: data available in other patient populations, but not from PK-d analogous populations, −: data not reported in any patient population
aFor the FACT-G and FACT-F subscales
Appraisal of health-related quality of life measures
| Attribute | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| SF-36 | • The most widely used PRO measure in general in PKD analogous conditions | • Floor/ceiling effects for some subscales (e.g., PH) in SCD |
| WHOQOL-BREF | • Cross-culturally developed | • Measures relatively broader and subjective QOL domains, which may be affected by other factors unrelated to PK-d treatment |
| FACT-An | • Extensive regulatory experience based on clinical trials of ESAs in cancer patients | |
| EORTC QLQ C30 | • Has best coverage of impacts/symptom-related concepts for the psychosocial model | |
| CHQ | • Domain structure is different between healthy children and those with a chronic disease | |
| PedsQL | • Has the most extensive psychometric evidence in pediatric SCD | |
| PedsQL MFS | • One of the most validated and widely used pediatric fatigue measures in SCD | |
| PedsQL SCD | • Content is underpinned by extensive qualitative research across children 5–8 years, parents, and experts in SCD | • As the measure is relatively new, current psychometric evidence is not extensive |
| pedsFACIT-F | • Superior measurement attributes—its development applied modern test theory | • Some key psychometric properties have not been reported, e.g., responsiveness and test–retest reliability |
| ASCQ-Me | • The only item bank for ASCQ-Me | • Regulatory uncertainty with use of PROs based on item banks in drug development |
| FROM-16 | • Rigorous development and validation across at least ten medical specialties | • As the measure is quite new, use in clinical trials remains limited |