1. Patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) in pancreatic cancer: A systematic review.
- Author
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Philip J., Knowles B.P.F., Leong T., Smith M., Ioannou L., Maharaj A., Samoborec S., Evans S.M., Zalcberg J., Neale R.E., Goldstein D., Merrett N., White K., Croagh D., Pilgrim C.H.C., Evans P., Philip J., Knowles B.P.F., Leong T., Smith M., Ioannou L., Maharaj A., Samoborec S., Evans S.M., Zalcberg J., Neale R.E., Goldstein D., Merrett N., White K., Croagh D., Pilgrim C.H.C., and Evans P.
- Abstract
Aims: Two-thirds of patients diagnosed with pancreatic cancer (PC) report at least one moderate to high-level physical or psychological unmet need, yet 20% do not access psychological support and only 45% accessed palliative care despite recommendations that in this population, patients benefit from early and intense supportive care management. Patients' perspectives reveal the impact of these unmet needs on health related-outcomes such as functional status, symptoms, wellbeing and quality of life. The aim of this systematic review was to examine patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs), their attributes and application in patients with pancreatic cancer (PC). Method(s): A systematic literature search was undertaken of articles published to June 2018. Characteristics of the included studies and PROMs were described with identified scales grouped into five domains. Result(s): From 1688 studies screened, 170 were included. Almost half (48%) of the studies were conducted in unresectable PC, majority of these (68%) evaluated in randomized controlled trials. Median questionnaire completion rates fell below 10% of the original cohort within 12 months in unresectable PC compared to 75% in patients with resectable PC at the same time point. Seventy-one PROMs were identified, 33 measuring unidimensional parameters (e.g. diabetes, pain, sexual health) and 38 measuring multidimensional (e.g. quality of life) constructs. Only five (7%) PROMs were disease-specific and 16 (23%) PROMs were validated in a PC or gastrointestinal cancer population. Fifty scales were grouped into 19 physical, 9 psychological, 6 psychiatric, 9 social and 7 other domains. Conclusion(s): This study provides an insight into the range of unidimensional and multidimensional instruments used to capture particular domains of interest. No single instrument captured the entirety of the five domains or 50 scales. Few of the PROMs have been validated specifically in PC patients. Further research is required to d
- Published
- 2021