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Congruence of patient- and clinician-reported toxicity in women receiving chemotherapy for early breast cancer

Authors :
Jo Ellen C. Speca
Hyman B. Muss
Kirsten A. Nyrop
Ji Hye Park
Raquel E. Reinbolt
Lisa A. Carey
Katherine E. Reeder-Hayes
Gretchen Kimmick
Allison M. Deal
Meghan Sri Karuturi
Ethan Basch
William A. Wood
Elizabeth Claire Dees
Yi Tang Chen
Bryce B. Reeve
Jordan T. Lee
Shlomit S. Shachar
Trevor A. Jolly
Source :
Cancer
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background The National Cancer Institute's Patient-Reported Outcomes Version of the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events, collected alongside the clinician-reported Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events, enables comparisons of patient and clinician reports on treatment toxicity. Methods In a multisite study of women receiving chemotherapy for early-stage breast cancer, symptom reports were collected on the same day from patients and their clinicians for 17 symptoms; their data were not shared with each other. The proportions of moderate, severe, or very severe patient-reported symptom severity were compared with the proportions of clinician-rated grade 2, 3, or 4 toxicity. Patient-clinician agreement was assessed via κ statistics. Chi-square tests investigated whether patient characteristics were associated with patient-clinician agreement. Results Among 267 women, the median age was 58 years (range, 24-83 years), and 26% were nonwhite. There was moderate scoring agreement (κ = 0.413-0.570) for 53% of symptoms, fair agreement for 41% (κ = 0.220-0.378), and slight agreement for 6% (κ = 0.188). For example, patient-reported and clinician-rated percentages were 22% and 8% for severe or very severe fatigue, 41% and 46% for moderate fatigue, 32% and 39% for mild fatigue, and 6% and 7% for none. Clinician severity scores were lower for nonwhite patients in comparison with white patients for peripheral neuropathy, nausea, arthralgia, and dyspnea. Conclusions Although clinician reporting of symptoms is common practice in oncology, there is suboptimal agreement with the gold standard of patient self-reporting. These data provide further evidence supporting the integration of patient-reported outcomes into oncological clinical research and clinical practice to improve monitoring of symptoms as well as timely interventions for symptoms.

Details

ISSN :
10970142
Volume :
126
Issue :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f8edcdcc661668b95ab07a4f98405f30