Abstract
Improving health-related quality of life (hrqol) is a key goal of systemic therapy in advanced lung cancer, although routine assessment remains challenging. We analyzed the impact of a real-time electronic hrqol tool, the electronic Lung Cancer Symptom Scale (elcss-ql), on palliative care (pc) referral rates, patterns of chemotherapy treatment, and use of other supportive interventions in patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (nsclc) receiving first-line chemotherapy. Patients with advanced nsclc starting first-line chemotherapy were randomized to their oncologist receiving or not receiving their elcss-ql data before each clinic visit. Patients completed the elcss-ql at baseline, before each chemotherapy cycle, and at subsequent follow-up visits until disease progression. Prospective data about the pc referral rate, hrqol, and use of other supportive interventions were collected. For the 95 patients with advanced nsclc who participated, oncologists received real-time elcss-ql data for 44 (elcss-ql arm) and standard clinical assessment alone for 51 (standard arm). The primary endpoint, the pc referral rate, was numerically higher, but statistically similar, for patients in the elcss-ql and standard arms. The hrqol scores over time were not significantly different between the two study arms. The elcss-ql is feasible as a tool for use in routine clinical practice, although no statistically significant effect of its use was demonstrated in our study. Improving access to supportive care through the collection of patient-reported outcomes and hrqol should be an important component of care for patients with advanced lung cancer.
Highlights
Improving health-related quality of life is a key goal of systemic therapy in advanced lung cancer, routine assessment remains challenging
The elcss-ql is feasible as a tool for use in routine clinical practice, no statistically significant effect of its use was demonstrated in our study
Improving access to supportive care through the collection of patient-reported outcomes and hrqol should be an important component of care for patients with advanced lung cancer
Summary
Improving health-related quality of life (hrqol) is a key goal of systemic therapy in advanced lung cancer, routine assessment remains challenging. We analyzed the impact of a real-time electronic hrqol tool, the electronic Lung Cancer Symptom Scale (elcss-ql), on palliative care (pc) referral rates, patterns of chemotherapy treatment, and use of other supportive interventions in patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (nsclc) receiving first-line chemotherapy. Despite recent advances that improve survival for subsets of patients with advanced non-smallcell lung cancer (nsclc), the symptom burden remains high and causes significant patient distress[2,3]. Because patients with advanced nsclc do not have curative treatment options, maximizing health-related quality of life (hrqol) is a key management goal of systemic therapy[4]. The rate of pc referral has remained low[7], most commonly because of conflicting perceptions of the role and need for palliative care[8]
Published Version (Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have