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Epitranscriptomics & Cancer Adaptation : A.David

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Item Type Journal Article
Title Comparing symptom reporting by prostate cancer patients and healthcare professionals in the international multicentre REQUITE study
Creator Heumann et al.
Author Philipp Heumann
Author Miguel E. Aguado-Barrera
Author Barbara Avuzzi
Author David Azria
Author Erik Briers
Author Renée Bultijnck
Author Ananya Choudhury
Author Dirk De Ruysscher
Author Marie-Pierre Farcy-Jacquet
Author Valérie Fonteyne
Author Antonio Gómez Caamaño
Author Irmgard Helmbold
Author Kerstie Johnson
Author Sarah L. Kerns
Author Maarten Lambrecht
Author Zoe Lingard
Author Tiziana Rancati
Author Barry S. Rosenstein
Author Elena Sperk
Author R. Paul Symonds
Author Christopher Talbot
Author Riccardo Valdagni
Author Ana Vega
Author Liv Veldeman
Author Tim Ward
Author Adam Webb
Author Catharine M. West
Author Jenny Chang-Claude
Author Petra Seibold
Abstract INTRODUCTION: Previous studies showed that healthcare professionals and patients had only moderate to low agreement on their assessment of treatment-related symptoms. We aimed to determine the levels of agreement in a large cohort of prostate cancer patients. METHODS: Analyses were made of data from 1,756 prostate cancer patients treated with external beam radiotherapy (RT) and/or brachytherapy in Europe and the USA and recruited into the prospective multicentre observational REQUITE study. Eleven pelvic symptoms at the end of RT were compared after translating patient-reported outcomes (PROs) into CTCAE-based healthcare professional ratings. Gwet's AC2 agreement coefficient and 95% confidence intervals were calculated for each symptom. To compare severity of grading between patients and healthcare professionals, percent agreement and deviations for each symptom were graphically depicted. Stratified and sensitivity analyses were conducted to identify potential influencing factors and to assess heterogeneity and robustness of results. RESULTS: The agreement for the 11 pelvic symptoms varied from very good (AC2 > 0.8: haematuria, rectal bleeding, management of sphincter control) to poor agreement (AC2 ? 0.2: proctitis and urinary urgency). Fatigue had a negative impact on the agreement. Patients tended to grade symptoms more severely than healthcare professionals. Information on sexual dysfunction was missing more frequently in healthcare professional assessment than PROs. CONCLUSION: Agreement was better for observable than subjective symptoms, with patients usually grading symptoms more severely than healthcare professionals. Our findings emphasize that PROs should complement symptom assessment by healthcare professionals and be taken into consideration for clinical decision-making to incorporate the patient perspective.
Publication Radiotherapy and Oncology: Journal of the European Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology
Volume 178
Pages 109426
Date 2023-01
Journal Abbr Radiother Oncol
Language eng
DOI 10.1016/j.radonc.2022.11.015
ISSN 1879-0887
Library Catalog PubMed
Extra PMID: 36442608
Tags Adverse events, Agreement, clinic, Delivery of Health Care, Humans, Male, Patient-reported outcomes, Prospective Studies, Prostate cancer, Prostatic Neoplasms, Radiotherapy, Rectum, Urination Disorders
Date Added 2023/11/23 - 12:48:28
Date Modified 2023/11/23 - 12:48:28
Notes and Attachments PubMed entry (Attachment)
Texte intégral (Attachment)


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