AI Article Synopsis

  • Cancer-treatment toxicity is common, and quick identification of symptoms is vital; to improve symptom reporting, a mobile ePROM app called QuestOnco was developed for real-time monitoring and reporting of cancer-treatment symptoms.
  • The application was designed with patient comprehension in mind and was validated through a cohort study that included 24 cancer patients in Stage I, who had no comprehension issues, and 110 patients in Stage II who used QuestOnco alongside traditional reporting methods.
  • Results showed high engagement with QuestOnco, indicating its potential for enhancing real-time symptom reporting and improving alignment with other reporting tools like PRO-CTCAE and medical records.

Article Abstract

Background: Cancer-treatment toxicity is common and symptoms must be identified quickly and accurately. Since symptom reporting during consultations is hampered by time constraints and patient/oncologist biases, patient-reported outcome-measure (PROM) questionnaires are useful. A strong shift to at-home cancer treatment has led to growing interest in remote symptom monitoring via electronic-PROMs (ePROMs). However, because PROMs are generally designed for medical-staff use, ePROMs must be adapted to patient comprehension/abilities. Here, to meet the oncological-healthcare needs of our region, we developed QuestOnco, a mobile-phone ePROM application. It is based on the symptom descriptions and severity grades of the PRO-CTCAE PROM and is designed for real-time on-demand reporting of 34 common or life-threatening cancer-treatment symptoms. This study describes the development of QuestOnco and its content validation relative to two comparators: PRO-CTCAE and the medical records.

Methods: The cohort study was conducted in a tertiary-care hospital in 2021 and consisted of two stages. Stage I assessed the comprehensibility of QuestOnco for patients: 24 cancer-therapy patients were asked to try the application for 30 min and then underwent semi-structured cognitive interviews. Stage II tested QuestOnco-content validity against the comparators: patients starting a ~ 6-week cancer-therapy cycle were asked to use QuestOnco in an on-demand fashion and to complete weekly paper PRO-CTCAEs. Total QuestOnco, PRO-CTCAE, and medical-record symptom reports were compared in terms of symptom and symptom-severity frequencies. Severity concordance of each reported symptom was assessed by Kendall's tau-b rank-correlation coefficients.

Results: In the second round of 12 Stage-I patients (total Stage-I enrollment rate = 100%), 0% reported comprehension difficulties. 110 patients were recruited for Stage II (enrollment rate = 23%). QuestOnco, PRO-CTCAE, and the medical records detected 85%, 100%, and 62% of the target symptoms at least once, respectively, and reported grade-1, -2, -3, and -4 toxicities with similar frequencies (56-67%, 23-32%, 6-10%, and 2-3%, respectively). Overall symptom-severity concordance was moderate with PRO-CTCAE (tau-b = + 0.21, range = -0.03 to + 0.38) and strong with the medical records (tau-b = + 0.33, range = -0.01 to + 0.61). Few remarkable discrepancies were observed.

Conclusions: The QuestOnco application was well-understood by patients and demonstrated good content validity compared to its parent PROM and the medical records.

Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov No. NCT04915274.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11665079PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12885-024-13312-4DOI Listing

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