A tailored phase I-specific patient-reported outcome (PRO) survey to capture the patient experience of symptomatic adverse events
Cet article décrit la création d'une enquête permettant de recueillir les expériences relatives à la survenue d'événements indésirables liés aux traitements de patients inclus dans des essais de phase I
Background: Patient perspectives are fundamental to defining tolerability of investigational anti-neoplastic therapies in clinical trials. Phase I trials present a unique challenge in designing tools for efficiently collecting patient-reported outcomes (PROs) given the difficulty of anticipating adverse events of relevance. However, phase I trials also offer an opportunity for investigators to optimize drug dosing based on tolerability for future larger-scale trials and in eventual clinical practice. Existing tools for comprehensively capturing PROs are generally cumbersome and are not routinely used in phase I trials.
Methods: Here, we describe the creation of a tailored survey based on the National Cancer Institute’s PRO-CTCAE for collecting patients’ perspectives on symptomatic adverse events in phase I trials in oncology.
Results: We describe our stepwise approach to condensing the original 78-symptom library into a modified 30 term core list of symptoms which can be efficiently applied. We further show that our tailored survey aligns with phase I trialists’ perspectives on symptoms of relevance.
Conclusions: This tailored survey represents the first PRO tool developed specifically for assessing tolerability in the phase I oncology population. We provide recommendations for future work aimed at integrating this survey into clinical practice.
British Journal of Cancer , article en libre accès, 2023