| Literature DB >> 35348712 |
Meaghann S Weaver1,2, Shana S Jacobs3, Janice S Withycombe4, Jichuan Wang5, Katie A Greenzang6, Justin N Baker7, Pamela S Hinds8,9.
Abstract
Importance: The variability in individual symptom and adverse event reporting between pediatric patient-reports and proxy-reports is widely reported. However, the question of whether symptom profiles based on reports from children with cancer and their caregivers are similar or disparate have not yet been studied. Objective: To compare proxy symptom reports with patient self-reports to assess alignment. Design, Setting, and Participants: A multicenter cohort study was conducted from October 2016 to December 2018 from data collected at 9 pediatric cancer centers. Participants were a convenience sample of family caregivers or proxies of children aged 7 to 18 years who had received disease-directed oncology treatment in the form of chemotherapy for at least 1 month. Data were analyzed identifying clusters of individuals (ie, latent profiles) based on various responses (ie, indicators) in August 2021. Exposures: The children of proxy participants received upfront chemotherapy. Children and proxies completed Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) surveys at 2 time points: within 72 hours preceding treatment initiation and following the course of chemotherapy. Main Outcomes and Measures: The latent profile analysis methods were applied to caregiver-proxy reports of PROMIS Pediatric symptom and function measures (anxiety, depressive symptoms, pain interference, fatigue, psychological stress, and physical function-mobility). The instrument categorized respondents as high symptom suffering, medium symptom suffering, and low symptom suffering (hereafter, high, medium, and low symptom groups, respectively).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35348712 PMCID: PMC8965635 DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.1855
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JAMA Netw Open ISSN: 2574-3805
Sample Demographic Characteristics of 431 Proxies and 436 Children
| Characteristic | No. (%) |
|---|---|
| Child age, mean (SD), y | 13.03 (3.40) |
| Duration since diagnosis, mean (SD), mo | 5.59 (7.34) |
| Hemoglobin, mean (SD), g/dL | 10.47 (1.54) |
| Child sex | |
| Male | 235 (54.65) |
| Female | 195 (45.35) |
| Child race and ethnicity | |
| Black | 73 (17.06) |
| Hispanic | 67 (15.65) |
| White | 242 (56.54) |
| Other | 46 (10.75) |
| Child cancer type | |
| Leukemia or lymphoma | 258 (59.17) |
| Solid tumor | 124 (28.44) |
| Neuro-oncology | 54 (12.39) |
| Proxy sex | |
| Male | 65 (15) |
| Female | 368 (85.00) |
| Proxy relationship status | |
| Not married | 113 (26.2) |
| Married | 318 (73.8) |
| Proxy educational level | |
| Elementary or primary school | 7 (1.64) |
| Secondary or high school | 88 (20.56) |
| Some college or university | 113 (26.40) |
| College/university | 155 (36.21) |
| Postgraduate degree | 65 (15.19) |
SI conversion factor: To convert hemoglobin to g/L, multiply by 10.0.
Frequencies of some variable may not sum up to entire cohort size due to some missing values.
Race and ethnicity were identified through patient and proxy self-report, with other as a convenience category with no further information available.
Pediatric and Proxy PROMIS Measures Within 72 Hours Preceding Treatment Initiation
| PROMIS measure | Score, mean (SD) | Difference (Bonferroni 95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Child (n = 436) | Proxy (n = 431) | ||
| Anxiety | 43.31 (9.98) | 48.33 (11.41) | 5.02 (3.70 to 6.45) |
| Depressive symptoms | 45.38 (10.59) | 48.08 (11.39) | 2.70 (1.23 to 4.04) |
| Fatigue | 44.66 (11.91) | 52.58 (12.80) | 7.91 (6.46 to 9.43) |
| Pain interference | 43.28 (8.93) | 47.63 (9.89) | 4.35 (3.26 to 5.51) |
| Mobility | 44.30 (9.95) | 40.74 (9.74) | −3.55 (−4.60 to −2.56) |
Abbreviation: PROMIS, Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System.
Represents a minimally important difference in the PROMIS scale.
Testing Similarity of Profile Distribution, Within-Profile Means, and Variances of Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System Measures Across Children and Proxies
| Profile solution | Model with noninvariant within-profile means and variance across populations | Model with invariant within-profile means and variance across populations | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Log-likelihood | Free parameters, No. | Scaling correction factor | Log-likelihood | Free parameters, No. | Scaling correction factor | |
| Testing similarity in within-profile mean | −15 948.505 | 39 | 1.2039 | −16 005.061 | 30 | −1.6005.061 |
| Testing similarity in within-profile variance | −15 948.505 | 39 | 1.1656 | −15 955.819 | 34 | 1.1656 |
Latent profile membership was regressed on the known class variable (ie, 1 children; 2 proxies) in the retained multiple-group latent profile analysis model with variant means, but invariant variances, of the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System measures across children and proxies.
A χ2 difference test based on loglikelihood values and scaling correction factors obtained with the MLR estimator[13] was used to test for similarity of profile characteristics across children and proxies.
Scaled χ2 test, df = 9, P < .001.
Equality restrictions were imposed on the within-profile means of PROMIS measures across children and proxies.
Scaled χ2 test, df = 5, P = .08.
Equality restrictions were imposed on the within-profile variances of PROMIS measures across children and proxies.
PROMIS Mean Scores by Latent Profile in Children and Proxies From Multigroup Latent Profile Analysis Model
| PROMIS measure | Mean (SE) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Children (n = 436) | Proxies (n = 431) | |||||
| Profile 1 (n = 199 [45.6%]) | Profile 2 (n = 168 [38.5%]) | Profile 3 (n = 69 [15.8%]) | Profile 1 (n = 173 [40.1%]) | Profile 2 (n = 197 [45.7%]) | Profile 3 (n = 61 [14.2%]) | |
| Anxiety | 36.75 (0.50) | 44.37 (1.03) | 59.50 (1.44) | 38.64 (0.62) | 51.70 (1.23) | 65.17 (3.30) |
| Depressive symptoms | 37.41 (0.58) | 48.06 (1.28) | 61.81 (1.29) | 37.28 (0.59) | 52.45 (1.36) | 64.74 (2.62) |
| Pain interference | 35.41 (0.83) | 50.48 (1.13) | 57.27 (1.36) | 41.84 (1.23) | 57.48 (1.24) | 67.37 (1.53) |
| Fatigue | 37.84 (0.46) | 45.72 (0.96) | 53.01 (1.31) | 41.05 (0.54) | 49.30 (1.43) | 61.18 (1.70) |
| Mobility | 50.11 (1.02) | 39.73 (0.78) | 38.73 (1.09) | 47.20 (0.92) | 37.10 (0.81) | 34.24 (0.97) |
Abbreviation: PROMIS, Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System.
Pediatric PROMIS measures in children; proxy PROMIS measures in proxies. Profile 1: low symptom groups; profile 2: moderate symptom groups; profile 3: high symptom groups.
Entropy statistic for the multigroup latent profile analysis model. Profile classification quality: entropy = 0.84.
Association of Sociodemographic and Clinical Factors With Latent Profile Classification in Children and Parents From Multigroup Multinomial Logit Model
| Variable | Children | Proxies | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Profile 1 | OR (95% CI) | Profile 1 | OR (95% CI) | |||
| Profile 2 | Profile 3 | Profile 2 | Profile 3 | |||
| Age | NA | 1.11 (1.02-1.21) | 1.04 (0.89-1.21) | NA | 0.94 (0.86-1.03) | 0.91 (0.78-1.07) |
| Sex | ||||||
| Female | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Male | 0.89 (0.53-1.51) | 0.73 (0.27-2.02) | 0.93 (0.51-1.70) | 0.59 (0.22-157) | ||
| Educational level | ||||||
| <College | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| ≥College/university | 0.99 (0.59-1.70) | 1.48 (0.56-3.88) | 0.50 (0.25-0.99)b | 0.68 (0.25-1.91) | ||
| Race and ethnicity | ||||||
| Black | NA | 0.85 (0.33-2.19) | 0.72 (0.12-4.21) | NA | 0.64 (0.25-1.64) | 0.84 (0.14-5.33) |
| White | 0.98 (0.47-2.08) | 1.04 (0.32-3.45) | 1.29 (0.61-2.76) | 0.82 (0.25-2.65) | ||
| Other | NA | NA | NA | NA | ||
| Time since diagnosis | ||||||
| ≤Median | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| >Median | 1.03 (0.45-2.34) | 1.00 (0.94-1.07) | 0.99 (0.96-1.01) | 0.98 (0.92-1.05) | ||
| Hemoglobin level, g/dL | NA | 0.83 (0.69 1.01) | 0.82 (0.61-1.09) | NA | 0.82 (0.67-1.00) | 0.75 (0.53-1.06) |
Abbreviations: NA, not applicable; OR, odds ratio.
SI conversion factor: To convert hemoglobin to g/L, multiply by 10.0.
Race and ethnicity were identified through patient and proxy self-report, with other as a convenience category with no further information available.