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Patient reported outcomes for cisplatin and radiation followed by carboplatin/paclitaxel versus carboplatin/paclitaxel for locally advanced endometrial carcinoma: An NRG oncology study

Authors :
Ursula A. Matulonis
Helen Q. Huang
Virginia L. Filiaci
Marcus Randall
Paul A. DiSilvestro
Katherine M. Moxley
Jeffrey M. Fowler
Matthew A. Powell
Nick M. Spirtos
Krishnansu S. Tewari
William E. Richards
John M. Nakayama
David G. Mutch
David S. Miller
Daniela Matei
Lari B. Wenzel
Source :
Gynecol Oncol
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Chemotherapy plus radiation (Cis-RT+CP) did not demonstrate superiority in prolonging relapse-free survival compared to chemotherapy alone in patients with stage III or IVA endometrial carcinoma. The impact of treatment on quality of life (QOL), neurotoxicity (NTX) and psychometric properties of the gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms subscale during treatment and up to 1 year are described herein. METHODS: QOL assessments were scheduled at baseline, 6 weeks (post completion of RT (Cis-RT+CP) or prior to cycle 3 (CP)), then 18 weeks (end of treatment) and 70 weeks (1 year after the end of treatment) after starting treatment. QOL instruments included the FACT-En TOI, FACT/GOG-neurotoxicity (Ntx) subscale (short), and the gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms subscale. RESULTS: At the end of treatment, patients receiving Cis-RT+CP reported a statistically significant decreased QOL when compared to CP. The decline in QOL was reflected in physical well-being, functional well-being, and endometrial cancer specific concerns, but the minimally important differences (MID) were not considered clinically meaningful. Patients in both groups reported increased chemotherapy-induced Ntx symptoms with the CP group having worse scores and reaching peak symptoms at the time of chemotherapy completion. Patients on Cis-RT+CP reported statistically significantly worse GI symptoms after radiation therapy compared to patients on CP, this occurred across assessment intervals, though the MID was not meaningful. Psychometric evaluations indicated that the GI symptom scale is reliable, valid, and responsive to change. CONCLUSIONS: PROs indicate that the chemoradiotherapy group experienced worse HRQoL and GI toxicity compared to patients randomized to chemotherapy alone for locally advanced endometrial cancer though based on the MID, these were not clinically meaningful differences. The GI symptom subscale was a reliable and valid scale that has value for future trials.

Details

ISSN :
10956859
Volume :
164
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gynecologic oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2579cb48ee8554dc8a88f2d0f4cd6d60