Abstract

Patient reports of their symptom burden (i.e., patient-reported outcomes or PROs) have been shown to direct clinicians' ability to personalize care and improve outcomes. A disciplined assessment of PRO in the population of patients with advanced penile cancer (PeCa) has not previously been undertaken. Our center leveraged a significant cadre of patients with PeCa and a significant experience with a well-established PRO: the Edmonton Symptom Assessment Scale (ESAS). After IRB approval, we screened ESAS surveys of 14,781 patients completed between February 2017 and February 2021; these were collected in the Supportive Care and Radiation Oncology clinics. Of these, those with PeCa were divided into 3 cohorts: (A) Those after any partial penectomy procedure without lymph node dissection (LND); (B) Those after partial penectomy procedure with LND; and (C) Those after total penectomy and LND. Patients with recurrent disease were analyzed separately (D). ESAS scores were collated and compared both by individual symptom and cumulatively. Twenty-two PeCa patients completed 122 ESAS surveys in this time and are included in this analysis: a median of 4 ESAS surveys (mean = 5, range = 1-19) were completed by each patient. The symptom with the highest median ESAS score was Tiredness (3.00). Patients with recurrent disease had the highest cumulative symptom score (median score = 30). Patients after total penectomy with LND had a higher cumulative symptom score (14.4) than those with partial penectomy and LND (7.9). Patients with partial penectomy without LND had a cumulative score of 22. PROs provide an insight into the morbidity of therapies for advanced PeCa, and the most symptoms are reported by patients with recurrent disease.

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