Cardellino Anna, Shah Manasee, Hanlon Jennifer, Kelly Kimberly, Martin Alexandra, Roborel de Climens Aude, Taiyari Sara, Stojadinovic Alexander
Patient Centered Outcomes Group, GSK, Collegeville, PA, United States.
GSK, Waltham, MA, United States.
Front Psychol. 2023 Sep 8;14:1217793. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1217793. eCollection 2023.
Advanced or metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is associated with significant symptom burden. It is important to understand the impact of these disease-and treatment-related symptoms on patients' daily lives and explore from a patient perspective what constitutes a meaningful change in NSCLC symptoms.
Patient experience of advanced or metastatic NSCLC was explored in this prospective, non-interventional qualitative research study recruiting patients from the United States (US). Interviews were conducted to explore the most important symptoms, daily life impacts, and patients' perspectives of what constitutes meaningful change when considering their current symptoms versus 6-12 months prior, based on the Patient Global Impression of Severity (PGI-S) and Patient Global Impression of Change (PGI-C) items.
Between February and April 2022, 19 US-based patients with Stage IV NSCLC were recruited; 95% were female, 63% were White, 79% had been diagnosed >1 year prior, and 63% were receiving targeted therapy. Over half the patients indicated their most important symptoms were fatigue, shortness of breath, and cough. Patient differentiation between whether symptoms were disease- or treatment-related lacked concordance, and often patients were unable to distinguish the two. The most frequently mentioned impacts of these symptoms on patients' daily lives were difficulty walking, sleep disturbance, anxiety/depression, impact on relationships, and difficulty doing daily tasks. Most patients considered a one-point change on the PGI-S or PGI-C to be meaningful based on rating their symptom severity at the time of the interview compared with 6-12 months before the interview.
Based on their own symptom experience, patients with advanced or metastatic NSCLC indicated a one-point threshold for meaningful change, whether improvement or worsening. This suggests a one-point change on the PGI-S or PGI-C may be a potential anchor for patient-reported outcome (PRO) endpoints used in clinical trials. It is important to use PRO instruments that capture the symptoms and impacts identified as most important to patients. These findings highlight the importance of using qualitative methods to assess disease-related symptoms, treatment-related side effects, and the impacts on daily life for patients with advanced or metastatic NSCLC, underscoring how qualitative assessments can complement quantitative PRO instruments for evaluating clinical trials.
晚期或转移性非小细胞肺癌(NSCLC)会给患者带来严重的症状负担。了解这些与疾病和治疗相关的症状对患者日常生活的影响,并从患者角度探索NSCLC症状中有意义的变化是什么,这很重要。
在这项前瞻性、非干预性定性研究中,对来自美国的患者进行了晚期或转移性NSCLC患者体验的探索。基于患者总体严重程度印象(PGI-S)和患者总体变化印象(PGI-C)项目,进行访谈以探讨最重要的症状、对日常生活的影响,以及患者对于将当前症状与6至12个月前相比有意义变化的看法。
2022年2月至4月期间,招募了19名美国IV期NSCLC患者;95%为女性,63%为白人,79%在1年多以前被诊断,63%正在接受靶向治疗。超过半数患者表示他们最重要的症状是疲劳、呼吸急促和咳嗽。患者对于症状是与疾病相关还是与治疗相关的区分缺乏一致性,而且患者通常无法区分这两者。这些症状对患者日常生活最常提到的影响是行走困难、睡眠障碍、焦虑/抑郁、对人际关系的影响以及难以完成日常任务。与访谈前6至12个月相比,根据访谈时对症状严重程度的评分,大多数患者认为PGI-S或PGI-C上的一分变化是有意义的。
基于自身的症状体验,晚期或转移性NSCLC患者指出有意义变化的一分阈值,无论是改善还是恶化。这表明PGI-S或PGI-C上的一分变化可能是临床试验中患者报告结局(PRO)终点的潜在锚定指标。使用能够捕捉对患者最重要的症状和影响的PRO工具很重要。这些发现凸显了使用定性方法评估晚期或转移性NSCLC患者与疾病相关的症状、与治疗相关的副作用以及对日常生活的影响的重要性,强调了定性评估如何能够补充定量PRO工具以评估临床试验。