Background: This study explored differences in patient-reported outcomes (PROs) for patients with central nervous system (CNS) tumors during COVID, compared to pre-pandemic assessments, in light of impacted access to in-person care.

Methods: Patient-reported outcomes (PROMIS-Anxiety and Depression Short-Forms, EQ-5D-3L, MDASI-BT/Spine, NeuroQoL-Perceived Cognitive Functioning) were collected from 149 participants on the Neuro-Oncology Branch Natural History Study seen during the first year of COVID between March 2020 and February 2021, which were compared to assessments collected pre-COVID. Paired sample -tests and proportion tests (-tests) were used to compare PROs with effect sizes reported using Hedges and Cohen's . Logistic regression models with backwards selection were used to identify risk factors for high levels of depression and anxiety pre- and during COVID.

Results: Participants were primarily male (54%) and Caucasian (84%) with a median age of 46 (range 20-79) and 66% had high-grade tumors. More patients reported moderate-severe depressive symptoms during the COVID year, compared to pre-COVID assessments (13% vs 8%, Cohen's  = 0.17,  = .021), with modest increases in symptom burden and cognitive dysfunction reported as well. Logistic regressions revealed that during COVID, concurrent moderate-severe distress and low tumor grade predicted depression and anxiety, with psychotropic medication use also predicting depression while active treatment predicted anxiety.

Conclusion: During COVID, patients experienced higher levels of depression, which has the potential to negatively influence treatment success and survival. Future work is needed to incorporate innovative tools and interventions that can be utilized remotely to identify and target mood disturbance in these vulnerable patients.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11798606PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nop/npae067DOI Listing

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