| Literature DB >> 31522359 |
Maria Fleseriu1, Leon Fogelfeld2, Murray B Gordon3, Jill Sisco4, Hilary H Colwell5, William H Ludlam6, Asi Haviv6, Susan D Mathias5.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Somatostatin analogs (SSAs) represent a mainstay of medical treatment for acromegaly, currently available as either intramuscular or deep subcutaneous injections. Patient-reported outcomes (PROs) are increasingly common as relevant outcomes in studies of acromegaly and its treatment, but there are no validated PRO measures available that focus on the disease burden and the impact of treatment, specifically designed for use in patients with acromegaly. We sought to develop a new and unique PRO measure, the Acromegaly Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire (Acro-TSQ).Entities:
Keywords: Acro-TSQ; Acromegaly; Patient reported outcomes; Quality of life; Questionnaire
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31522359 PMCID: PMC6842345 DOI: 10.1007/s11102-019-00986-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pituitary ISSN: 1386-341X Impact factor: 4.107
Fig. 1Development process of the Acro-TSQ
Example questions from (A) interview guides and (B) Acro-TSQ
| (A) From interview guides | |
|---|---|
| Topic area | Question |
| Treatment effectiveness | “Thinking about [insert current treatment], how well do you think it works? Why? Tell me more about the pattern of your symptoms.” If necessary, probe symptoms: joint or muscle pain, sweating, fatigue, headaches, swelling of extremities. “Tell me more about each symptom.” “Do you ever have symptoms even though you are receiving treatment?” |
| Treatment experience | “How much discomfort, if any, do you experience with your treatment? Tell me more about that. (If an injection) have you ever had an injection site reaction? [If yes] Tell me about that. (Probes: how did it feel? how long did it last? what did it look like? do you experience pain, lumps/nodules, swelling, inflammation/infection, bruising/hematoma, irritation (red skin, itching), other skin lesions (pitting, abscess, discoloration, ulcer))?” “Have you ever experienced any side effects from this treatment? [If yes] What side effects have you experienced? (Probes: nausea, diarrhea, abdominal pain, constipation, fever, dizziness, headaches, fatigue, flatulence, other skin lesions (pitting, abscess, discoloration, ulcer)” |
| Emotional impact | “How much, if at all, does your current treatment affect you emotionally? (Probes: feeling angry, frustrated, dependent, anxious, fearful, stressed, loss of independence) Why? How much does your treatment interfere with your ability to socialize? (Probes: spend time with family or friends) Why?” |
| Clarity | “Looking at question [insert question] in your own words, what is this question asking you?” “Do you have any suggestions about how this question could be revised? If yes, please describe. Why do you think that is clearer?” |
| Format | “Was it helpful or unhelpful to have the words in the parentheses? Why? Are there other examples that you recommend we include in the parentheses or any that you recommend we omit? If yes, please describe.” “Do you think we need more or fewer response options for any of the questions? Why? Do you have any suggestions for a different set of response options for any of the questions? If yes, why do you prefer these response options?” |
| Recall period | “What timeframe were you thinking about when you answered the questions that were asking you to think ‘in general’? Was it confusing that the timeframe here was ‘in general’ and the questions right before this used the past 4 weeks? Why or why not?” “Was it easy or difficult to think about ‘the past 4 weeks’?” |
Demographic and clinical characteristics
| CE | CE/CD | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| (n = 9) | (n = 10a) | (n = 19) | |
| Age, years (mean ± SD) (range) | 44 ± 9.8 (31–57) | 50 ± 14.4 (31–84) | 47 ± 12.5 (31–84) |
| Gender, n (%) | |||
| Male | 4 (44%) | 4 (40%) | 8 (43%) |
| Female | 5 (56%) | 6 (60%) | 11 (58%) |
| Education, n (%) | |||
| Less than HS | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| HS diploma | 2 (22%) | 3 (30%) | 5 (26%) |
| Some college | 3 (33%) | 2 (20%) | 5 (26%) |
| College degree | 2 (22%) | 3 (30%) | 5 (26%) |
| Professional or advanced degree | 2 (22%) | 2 (20%) | 4 (21%) |
| Ethnicity, n (%) | |||
| Caucasian | 8 (89%) | 7 (70%) | 15 (79%) |
| African American | 0 | 3 (30%) | 3 (16%) |
| Latino Hispanic | 1 (11%) | 0 | 1 (5%) |
| Marital status, n (%) | |||
| Married | 6 (67%) | 7 (70%) | 13 (68%) |
| Living with partner | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Widowed/divorced/separated | 1 (11%) | 2 (20%) | 3 (16%) |
| Single, never married | 2 (22%) | 1 (10%) | 3 (16%) |
| Household Income, n (%) | |||
| < $25,000 | 1 (11%) | 3 (30%) | 4 (21%) |
| $25,000–$49,999 | 2 (22%) | 1 (10%) | 3 (16%) |
| $50,000–$74,999 | 3 (33%) | 3 (30%) | 6 (32%) |
| $75,000–$99,999 | 3 (33%) | 2 (20%) | 5 (26%) |
| ≥ $100,000 | 0 | 1 (10%) | 1 (5%) |
| Work status, n (%) | |||
| Full time for pay | 3 (33%) | 4 (40%) | 7 (37%) |
| Part time for pay | 1 (11%) | 4 (40%) | 5 (26%) |
| Don’t work for pay due to acromegaly | 3 (33%) | 2 (20%) | 5 (26%) |
| Don’t work for pay, not due to acromegaly | 2 (22%) | 0 | 2 (11%) |
| Time since diagnosis, year (mean ± SD) (range) | 10.0 ± 9.2 (0–32) | 6.9 ± 5.0 (1–15) | 9.0 ± 7.4 (0–32) |
| Surgery to treat acromegaly | |||
| N | 9 | 9 | 18 |
| Ever received (n, %) | 9 (100%) | 8 (89%) | 17 (94%) |
| Radiation to treat acromegaly | |||
| N | 9 | 9 | 18 |
| Ever received (n, %) | 6 (67%) | 1 (11%) | 7 (39%) |
| Current treatment | |||
| Lanreoltide (Somatuline Depot/Autogel) | 7 (78%) | 8 (80%) | 15 (79%) |
| Octreotide (Sandostatin LAR Depot) | 2 (22%) | 2 (20%) | 4 (21%) |
| Rating of acromegaly control | |||
| Controlled | 8 (89%) | 5 (55%) | 13 (72%) |
| Partially controlled | 1 (11%) | 3 (33%) | 4 (22%) |
| Not well controlled | 0 | 1 (11%) | 1 (6%) |
| Co-morbid conditions (ever) | |||
| Hypertension | 5 (44%) | 4 (44%) | 9 (50%) |
| Diabetes | 3 (33%) | 6 (66%) | 9 (50%) |
| Sleep apnea | 3 (33%) | 4 (44%) | 7 (39%) |
| Headaches | 4 (44%) | 5 (55%) | 9 (50%) |
| Osteoarthritis | 3 (33%) | 4 (44%) | 5 (28%) |
| Depression | 2 (22%) | 6 (66%) | 8 (44%) |
| Hypopituitarism | 5 (55%) | 1 (11%) | 6 (33%) |
| Gallstones | 1 (11%) | 3 (33%) | 4 (22%) |
| GI issues | 1 (11%) | 4 (44%) | 5 (28%) |
| Other | 3 (33%) | 4 (44%) | 7 (39%) |
aOne subject in the CE only group, and six subjects in the combined CE/CD group self-reported their clinical data since their endocrinologist was not willing or not able to provide HOS with the clinical data. Clinical data are not available for one subject in this group
Fig. 2Impact of acromegaly
Fig. 3Impact of Aromegaly Treatment
Representative quotes from concept elicitation interviews and combined concept elicitation and cognitive debriefing interviews
| Topic area | Representative quotes |
|---|---|
| Effectiveness of current treatment | “It’s clear that the [treatment] is certainly working and I’m certainly seeing results because in the past when we have just attempted to go off of that medication even for a month, you can see drastically that those levels shoot right back up and not just a little bit. It’s usually a pretty significant increase in a short amount of time” “Well it seems to be controlling my levels. For one, it’s a one-time injection and although after the injection I’m sick for two to three days, the rest of the month I feel pretty good” “Well I think, why I don’t think it’s symptom wise is working very well is because I still experience the same, the sweats, like I get very hot, I get very anxious and these are ongoing where I’m on [treatment] or not” “Well, it doesn’t have quite, as far as I understand it doesn’t have quite the effect on this as some of the other treatments and the side-effects that it does have is significant for me so I’m getting a lot of side-effects on a medium level dose that’s, at best, moderately effective in keeping my IGF-1 in check” |
| Discomfort or reactions to injections | “It’s painful, it certainly is painful and the act of actually sticking it is, it hurts. However, it’s just a few seconds though” “It depends on the month, but on average mild discomfort for maybe a day or two, just injection site pain” “I get a lump, a little marble sized lump, but it doesn’t bother me” “No redness. A little bruising once in while if we hit a blood vessel” “Well when I first get it, it’s burning, it’s a burning feeling and it’s, it probably stays sore for that first day where it’s uncomfortable. So I don’t try, I try not to schedule a lot to do that day” “The itching probably lasts for a couple of days. The swelling lasts probably for about, I’d say about a week. The redness kind of goes away more of when the itching goes away” |
| Impact of treatment on emotional and social functioning | “The actual injection causes me quite a bit of anxiety now so emotionally it takes it tolls a few days beforehand when I am preparing myself, the fact that I have to schedule the appointment and go to the hospital, I don’t know, every time I have to go to the hospital it’s just a reminder, I mean that’s where I had my surgery, it’s where sick people go so it’s a constant reminder, going to the hospital, going in there that I’m sick and I have to keep coming here and I have to keep seeing a nurse” “It’s not just anxiety. It’s a fear of the future. In terms of, it does create anxiety and worry for me about the side-effects. I mean at this point after 24 or 26 or 28 shots the side-effects should be fairly predictable, but again I worry about that particularly if the disease process returns and my hope is that there’s a pill or something that’s more effective with the same amount of side-effects or less” |
| Satisfaction with acromegaly treatment (on a scale from 0 to 10, where 0 is not at all satisfied and 10 is extremely satisfied) | “Right now I would give it like a two or a three. If you talked to me three months ago I would have given it a zero, but I’ll give it a two or three right now just because it’s actually doing something. It took four years to do something” “I’d say 8. Because it works, it keeps the symptoms down and all” “I would say probably a nine. I’m satisfied with it and it helps and everything. The only two issues I have is the wear-off time and then the pain of the needle, but like I said I don’t really experience that because I have the medication that numbs it, but I still get anxiety about it” “I’m not really satisfied, maybe a five” |