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Minimally important differences for interpreting EORTC QLQ-C30 change scores over time: A synthesis across 21 clinical trials involving nine different cancer types.

Authors :
Musoro, Jammbe Z.
Coens, Corneel
Sprangers, Mirjam A.G.
Brandberg, Yvonne
Groenvold, Mogens
Flechtner, Hans-Henning
Cocks, Kim
Velikova, Galina
Dirven, Linda
Greimel, Elfriede
Singer, Susanne
Pogoda, Katarzyna
Gamper, Eva M.
Sodergren, Samantha C.
Eggermont, Alexander
Koller, Michael
Reijneveld, Jaap C.
Taphoorn, Martin J.B.
King, Madeleine T.
Bottomley, Andrew
Source :
European Journal of Cancer. Jul2023, Vol. 188, p171-182. 12p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Early guidelines for minimally important differences (MIDs) for the EORTC QLQ-C30 proposed ≥10 points change as clinically meaningful for all scales. Increasing evidence that MIDs can vary by scale, direction of change, cancer type and estimation method has raised doubt about a single global standard. This paper identifies MID patterns for interpreting group-level change in EORTC QLQ-C30 scores across nine cancer types. Data were obtained from 21 published EORTC Phase III trials that enroled 13,015 patients across nine cancer types (brain, colorectal, advanced breast, head/neck, lung, mesothelioma, melanoma, ovarian, and prostate). Anchor-based MIDs for within-group change and between-group differences in change over time were obtained via mean change method and linear regression, respectively. Separate MIDs were estimated for improvements and deteriorations. Distribution-based estimates were derived and compared with anchor-based MIDs. Anchor-based MIDs mostly ranged from 5 to 10 points. Differences in MIDs for improvement vs deterioration, for both within-group and between-group, were mostly within a 2-points range. Larger differences between within-group and between-group MIDs were observed for several scales in ovarian, lung and head/neck cancer. Most anchor-based MIDs ranged between 0.3 SD and 0.5 SD distribution-based estimates. Our results reinforce recent claims that no single MID can be applied to all EORTC QLQ-C30 scales and disease settings. MIDs varied by scale, improvement/deterioration, within/between comparisons and by cancer type. Researchers applying commonly used rules of thumb must be aware of the risk of dismissing changes that are clinically meaningful or underpowering analyses when smaller MIDs apply. • MID patterns for interpreting group-level change are examined by QLQ-C30 scales. • Data were obtained from 21 published EORTC clinical trials across 9 cancer types. • MIDs varied by scale, improve/deteriorate, within/between groups and cancer type. • Our results reinforce claims that no single MID applies to all QLQ-C30 scales. • We present diversified MIDs to inform more accurate sample size calculations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09598049
Volume :
188
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
European Journal of Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
164281228
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejca.2023.04.027