| Literature DB >> 32684503 |
Abstract
Oncologists should recognise the need to move beyond the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group Performance Status (ECOG PS) score. ECOG PS is a longstanding and ubiquitous feature of oncology. It was evolved 40 years ago as an adaption of the 70-year-old Karnofsky performance score. It is short, easily understood and part of the global language of oncology. The wide prevalence of the ECOG PS attests to its proven utility and worth to help triage patient treatment. The ECOG PS is problematic. It is a unidimensional functional score. It is mostly physician assessed, subjective and therefore open to bias. It fails to account for multimorbidity, frailty or cognition. Too often the PS is recorded only once in wilful ignorance of a patient's changing physical state. As modern oncology offers an ever-widening array of therapies that are 'personalised' to tumour genotype, modern oncologists must strive to better define patient phenotype. Using a wider range of scoring and assessment tools, oncologists can identify deficits that may be reversed or steps taken to mitigate detrimental effects of treatment. These tools can function well to identify those patients who would benefit from comprehensive assessment. This overview identifies the strengths of ECOG PS but highlights the weaknesses and where these are supported by other measures. A strong recommendation is made here to move to routine use of the Clinical Frailty Score to start to triage patients and most appropriately design treatments and rehabilitation interventions.Entities:
Keywords: Comorbidity; frailty; multimorbidity; polypharmacy
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32684503 PMCID: PMC7365102 DOI: 10.1016/j.clon.2020.06.016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Oncol (R Coll Radiol) ISSN: 0936-6555 Impact factor: 4.126
Case histories
| Patient 1 | Patient 2 | |
|---|---|---|
| 75-year-old males recently diagnosed with lung cancer. Both patients have been short of breath in the months leading to their diagnosis | ||
| Functional status | Independent | Needing help with shopping |
| Comorbidity | Nil significant | Diabetes |
| Polypharmacy | Takes a statin | 5 medications |
| Nutrition | Body mass index 29 | Body mass index 19 |
| Cognition | No issues | Recently more forgetful |
| Social status | Attends clinic with wife and daughter | Widower who lives alone |
| G8 score | 16 | 5 |
| Clinical Frailty Score (Rockwood) | 3 (managing well) | 6 (moderately frail) |
| myCARG risk of grade 3–5 toxicity with chemotherapy | 59% | 86% |
Both patients could correctly be assigned a Performance Status of 2 but we would expect their tolerance of the same oncological treatment plan to be very different.
Domains and how they may be assessed
| Functional status | ADLs | |
| Functional status (objective performance) | TUG | |
| Psychological health | Geriatric depression score | |
| Multimorbidity | ACE 27 | |
| Cognition | MMSE | |
| Polypharmacy | STOP/START | |
| General screening tools | Clinical Frailty Score (Rockwood) |
ADLs, Activities of Daily Living; ECOG, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group; FACT-G, Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General; HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; IADLs, Instrumental Activities of Daily Living; Mini-COG, Min-Cog-Screening for Cognitive Impairment in Older Adults; MMSE, Mini Mental State Examination; MOB-T, The MobilityTiredness Scale; MoCA, Montreal Cognitive Assessment; MOS, Medical Outcomes SF-36 Physcial Functioning Scale; NCCN, The National Comprehensive Cancer Network; PRISMA-7, Program of Research to Integrate Services for the Maintenance of Autonomy-7 Scale; STOP, Screening Tool of Older People's Prescriptions; START, Screening Tool to Alert to Right Treatment; TUG, Timed Up and Go; VES-13, Vulnerable Elders Survey.