Back to Search Start Over

Measuring what matters MOST: validation of the Measure of Ovarian Symptoms and Treatment, a patient-reported outcome measure of symptom burden and impact of chemotherapy in recurrent ovarian cancer.

Authors :
King, Madeleine T.
Stockler, Martin R.
O’Connell, Rachel L.
Buizen, Luke
Joly, Florence
Lanceley, Anne
Hilpert, Felix
Okamoto, Aikou
Aotani, Eriko
Bryce, Jane
Donnellan, Paul
Oza, Amit
Avall-Lundqvist, Elisabeth
Berek, Jonathan S.
Sehouli, Jalid
Feeney, Amanda
Berton-Rigaud, Dominique
Costa, Daniel S. J.
Friedlander, Michael L.
for the GCIG Symptom Benefit group
Source :
Quality of Life Research; Jan2018, Vol. 27 Issue 1, p59-74, 16p
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

<bold>Purpose: </bold>Gynecologic Cancer Intergroup Symptom Benefit Study (GCIG-SBS) Stage 2 aimed to review, revise, and validate a patient-reported outcome measure (PROM), the Measure of Ovarian Symptoms and Treatment concerns (MOST), developed in GCIG-SBS Stage 1 (MOSTv1, 35 items), and document recurrent ovarian cancer (ROC) symptom burden and benefit.<bold>Methods: </bold>GCIG-SBS Stage 2 recruited patients with platinum-resistant/refractory ROC (PRR-ROC) or potentially platinum-sensitive ROC with ≥ 3 lines of prior chemotherapy (PPS-ROC ≥ 3). Patients completed MOSTv1, QLQ-C30, QLQ-OV28, and FACT-O/FOSI at baseline and before cycle 3 of chemotherapy (pre-C3), and global assessments of change (MOST-Change) pre-C3. Clinicians rated patients' cancer-related symptoms, performance status, and adverse events. Convergent and divergent validity (Spearman's correlations), discriminative validity (effect sizes between groups classified by clinician-rated characteristics), and responsiveness (paired t tests in patients expected to experience clinically meaningful change) were assessed.<bold>Results: </bold>Of 948 recruits, 903 completed PROMs at baseline and 685 pre-C3. Baseline symptom burden was substantial for PRR-ROC and PPS-ROC ≥ 3. MOSTv2 has 24 items and five multi-item scales: abdominal symptoms (MOST-Abdo), disease or treatment-related symptoms (MOST-DorT), chemotherapy-related symptoms (MOST-Chemo), psychological symptoms (MOST-Psych), and MOST-Well-being. Correlations confirmed concurrent and divergent validity. Discriminative validity was confirmed by effect sizes that conformed with a priori hypotheses. MOST-Abdo was responsive to improvements in abdominal symptoms and MOST-Chemo detected the adverse effects of chemotherapy.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>The MOSTv2 validly quantifies patient-reported symptom burden, adverse effects, and symptom benefit in ROC, and as such is fit-for-purpose for clinical trials of palliative chemotherapy in ROC. Further research is required to assess test-retest reliability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09629343
Volume :
27
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Quality of Life Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
127379429
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11136-017-1729-8