Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer Symptom Assessment Questionnaire: Psychometric Performance and Regulatory Qualification of a Novel Patient-Reported Symptom Measure
ABSTRACT: Background: The Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer Symptom Assessment Questionnaire (NSCLC-SAQ) was developed to incorporate the patient's perspective into evaluation of clinical benefit in advanced non–small cell lung cancer trials and meet regulatory expectations for doing so. Qualitative...
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doaj-8a6efa162794453a945beaf5008c44992021-09-17T04:33:51ZengElsevierCurrent Therapeutic Research0011-393X2021-01-0195100642Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer Symptom Assessment Questionnaire: Psychometric Performance and Regulatory Qualification of a Novel Patient-Reported Symptom MeasureDonald M. Bushnell, MA0Thomas M. Atkinson, PhD1Kelly P. McCarrier, PhD2Astra M. Liepa, PharmD3Kendra P. DeBusk, PhD4Stephen Joel Coons, PhD5Patient-Centered Research, Evidera, Seattle, Washington; Address correspondence to: Donald M. Bushnell, MA, Evidera, 1417 4th Ave, Suite 501, Seattle, WA 98101.Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, Patient-Reported Outcomes, Community-Engagement, and Language Core Facility, New York, New YorkPharmerit International, Patient-Centered Outcomes, Bethesda, MarylandEli Lilly and Company, Global Patient Outcomes and Real World Evidence, Indianapolis, IndianaSeattle Genetics, Global HEOR, Bothell, WashingtonCritical Path Institute, Patient-Reported Outcome Consortium, Tucson, ArizonaABSTRACT: Background: The Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer Symptom Assessment Questionnaire (NSCLC-SAQ) was developed to incorporate the patient's perspective into evaluation of clinical benefit in advanced non–small cell lung cancer trials and meet regulatory expectations for doing so. Qualitative evidence supported 7 items covering 5 symptom concepts. Objective: This study evaluated measurement properties of the NSCLC-SAQ's items, overall scale, and total score. Methods: In this observational cross-sectional study, a purposive sample of patients with clinician-diagnosed advanced non–small cell lung cancer, initiating or undergoing treatment, provided sociodemographic information and completed the NSCLC-SAQ, National Comprehensive Cancer Network/Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy Lung Symptom Index (FLSI-17), and a Patient Global Impression of Severity item. Rasch analyses, factor analyses, and assessments of construct validity and reliability were completed. Results: The 152 participants had a mean age of 64 years, 57% were women, and 87% where White. The majority were Stage IV (83%), 51% had an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 1 (32% performance status 0 and 17% performance status 2), and 33% were treatment naïve. Rasch analyses showed ordered thresholds for response options. Factor analyses demonstrated that items could be combined for a total score. Internal consistency (Cronbach α = 0.78) and test–retest reliability (intraclass correlation coefficient = 0.87) were quite satisfactory. NSCLC-SAQ total score correlation was 0.83 with the National Comprehensive Cancer Network/Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy Lung Symptom Index-17. The NSCLC-SAQ was able to differentiate between symptom severity levels and performance status (both P values < .001). Conclusions: The NSCLC-SAQ generated highly reliable scores with substantial evidence of construct validity. The Food and Drug Administration's qualification supports the NSCLC-SAQ as a measure of symptoms in drug development. Further evaluation is needed on its longitudinal measurement properties and interepretation of meaningful within-patient score change. (Curr Ther Res Clin Exp. 2021; 82:XXX–XXX)http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0011393X21000205non–small-cell lung carcinomapatient reported outcome measurespsychometricssymptom assessment |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Donald M. Bushnell, MA Thomas M. Atkinson, PhD Kelly P. McCarrier, PhD Astra M. Liepa, PharmD Kendra P. DeBusk, PhD Stephen Joel Coons, PhD |
spellingShingle |
Donald M. Bushnell, MA Thomas M. Atkinson, PhD Kelly P. McCarrier, PhD Astra M. Liepa, PharmD Kendra P. DeBusk, PhD Stephen Joel Coons, PhD Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer Symptom Assessment Questionnaire: Psychometric Performance and Regulatory Qualification of a Novel Patient-Reported Symptom Measure Current Therapeutic Research non–small-cell lung carcinoma patient reported outcome measures psychometrics symptom assessment |
author_facet |
Donald M. Bushnell, MA Thomas M. Atkinson, PhD Kelly P. McCarrier, PhD Astra M. Liepa, PharmD Kendra P. DeBusk, PhD Stephen Joel Coons, PhD |
author_sort |
Donald M. Bushnell, MA |
title |
Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer Symptom Assessment Questionnaire: Psychometric Performance and Regulatory Qualification of a Novel Patient-Reported Symptom Measure |
title_short |
Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer Symptom Assessment Questionnaire: Psychometric Performance and Regulatory Qualification of a Novel Patient-Reported Symptom Measure |
title_full |
Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer Symptom Assessment Questionnaire: Psychometric Performance and Regulatory Qualification of a Novel Patient-Reported Symptom Measure |
title_fullStr |
Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer Symptom Assessment Questionnaire: Psychometric Performance and Regulatory Qualification of a Novel Patient-Reported Symptom Measure |
title_full_unstemmed |
Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer Symptom Assessment Questionnaire: Psychometric Performance and Regulatory Qualification of a Novel Patient-Reported Symptom Measure |
title_sort |
non–small cell lung cancer symptom assessment questionnaire: psychometric performance and regulatory qualification of a novel patient-reported symptom measure |
publisher |
Elsevier |
series |
Current Therapeutic Research |
issn |
0011-393X |
publishDate |
2021-01-01 |
description |
ABSTRACT: Background: The Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer Symptom Assessment Questionnaire (NSCLC-SAQ) was developed to incorporate the patient's perspective into evaluation of clinical benefit in advanced non–small cell lung cancer trials and meet regulatory expectations for doing so. Qualitative evidence supported 7 items covering 5 symptom concepts. Objective: This study evaluated measurement properties of the NSCLC-SAQ's items, overall scale, and total score. Methods: In this observational cross-sectional study, a purposive sample of patients with clinician-diagnosed advanced non–small cell lung cancer, initiating or undergoing treatment, provided sociodemographic information and completed the NSCLC-SAQ, National Comprehensive Cancer Network/Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy Lung Symptom Index (FLSI-17), and a Patient Global Impression of Severity item. Rasch analyses, factor analyses, and assessments of construct validity and reliability were completed. Results: The 152 participants had a mean age of 64 years, 57% were women, and 87% where White. The majority were Stage IV (83%), 51% had an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 1 (32% performance status 0 and 17% performance status 2), and 33% were treatment naïve. Rasch analyses showed ordered thresholds for response options. Factor analyses demonstrated that items could be combined for a total score. Internal consistency (Cronbach α = 0.78) and test–retest reliability (intraclass correlation coefficient = 0.87) were quite satisfactory. NSCLC-SAQ total score correlation was 0.83 with the National Comprehensive Cancer Network/Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy Lung Symptom Index-17. The NSCLC-SAQ was able to differentiate between symptom severity levels and performance status (both P values < .001). Conclusions: The NSCLC-SAQ generated highly reliable scores with substantial evidence of construct validity. The Food and Drug Administration's qualification supports the NSCLC-SAQ as a measure of symptoms in drug development. Further evaluation is needed on its longitudinal measurement properties and interepretation of meaningful within-patient score change. (Curr Ther Res Clin Exp. 2021; 82:XXX–XXX) |
topic |
non–small-cell lung carcinoma patient reported outcome measures psychometrics symptom assessment |
url |
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0011393X21000205 |
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