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Symptom burden and quality of life with chemotherapy for recurrent ovarian cancer : the Gynecologic Cancer InterGroup-Symptom Benefit Study

Authors :
Lee, Yeh Chen
King, Madeleine T.
OConnell, Rachel L.
Lanceley, Anne
Joly, Florence
Hilpert, Felix
Davis, Alison
Roncolato, Felicia T.
Okamoto, Aikou
Bryce, Jane
Donnellan, Paul
Oza, Amit M.
Åvall Lundqvist, Elisabeth
Berek, Jonathan S.
Ledermann, Jonathan A.
Berton, Dominique
Sehouli, Jalid
Feeney, Amanda
Kaminsky, Marie-Christine
Diamante, Katrina
Stockler, Martin R.
Friedlander, Michael L.
Lee, Yeh Chen
King, Madeleine T.
OConnell, Rachel L.
Lanceley, Anne
Joly, Florence
Hilpert, Felix
Davis, Alison
Roncolato, Felicia T.
Okamoto, Aikou
Bryce, Jane
Donnellan, Paul
Oza, Amit M.
Åvall Lundqvist, Elisabeth
Berek, Jonathan S.
Ledermann, Jonathan A.
Berton, Dominique
Sehouli, Jalid
Feeney, Amanda
Kaminsky, Marie-Christine
Diamante, Katrina
Stockler, Martin R.
Friedlander, Michael L.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Objective The Gynecologic Cancer InterGroup (GCIG)-Symptom Benefit Study was designed to evaluate the effects of chemotherapy on symptoms and health-related quality of life (HRQL) in women having chemotherapy for platinum resistant/refractory recurrent ovarian cancer (PRR-ROC) and potentially platinum sensitive with >= 3 lines of chemotherapy (PPS-ROC >= 3). Methods Participants completed the Measure of Ovarian Cancer Symptoms and Treatment (MOST) and European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) Quality of Life Questionnaire QLQ-C30 questionnaires at baseline and every 3-4 weeks until progression. Participants were classified symptomatic if they rated >= 4 of 10 in at least one-third of symptoms in the MOST index. Improvement in MOST was defined as two consecutive scores of <= 3 in at least half of the symptomatic items at baseline. Improvement in HRQL was defined as two consecutive scores >= 10 points above baseline in the QLQ-C30 summary score scale (range 0-100). Results Of 948 participants enrolled, 910 (96%) completed baseline questionnaires: 546 with PRR-ROC and 364 with PPS-ROC >= 3. The proportions of participants symptomatic at baseline as per MOST indexes were: abdominal 54%, psychological 53%, and disease- or treatment-related 35%. Improvement was reported in MOST indexes: abdominal 40%, psychological 35%, and disease- or treatment-related 38%. Median time to improvement in abdominal symptoms occurred earlier for PRR-ROC than for PPS-ROC >= 3 (4 vs 6 weeks, p=0.044); median duration of improvement was also similar (9.0 vs 11.7 weeks, p=0.65). Progression-free survival was longer among those with improvement in abdominal symptoms than in those without (median 7.2 vs 2.5 months, p<0.0001). Improvements in HRQL were reported by 77/448 (17%) with PRR-ROC and 61/301 (20%) with PPS-ROC >= 3 (p=0.29), and 102/481 (21%) of those with abdominal symptoms at baseline. Conclusion Ove<br />Funding Agencies|NHMRCNational Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [1063012, 570893]; Target Ovarian Cancer [UCL-P001AL]; Cancer Research UKCancer Research UK; UCL Cancer Trials Centre [C444/A15953]; Australian Government through Cancer AustraliaAustralian Government; NHMRC Program grantNational Health and Medical Research Council of Australia; Department of HealthEuropean Commission

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1312835555
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136.ijgc-2021-003142