Abstract

BackgroundPatients’ experience of symptoms often goes undetected during consultation in an outpatient clinic, and the use of a patient-reported outcome measure (PRO) in such a setting could be useful to aid treatment decision-making. A new PRO measure, the HM-PRO (Hematological Malignancy Specific Patient-Reported Outcome Measure) has been recently developed to evaluate hematological malignancy (HM) patients’ health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and their symptom experience in daily clinical practice as well as in research. The objectives of the study were to assess: the internal consistency of the scores for Part A (impact) and its four domains (physical behavior; social well-being; emotional behavior; and eating and drinking habits) and Part B (signs and symptoms); and the test-retest reliability of the individual items of the newly developed hematological malignancy specific composite measure, the HM-PRO.MethodsThis was a prospective longitudinal observational study where 150 patients with different HMs and different stage of disease (male n = 98 (65.3%); mean age 64.9 ± 14.4 years, range 17.9–89.2 years; mean time since diagnosis 3.7 ± 4.9 years, range 0.04–25.8 years) completed the HM-PRO at baseline (assessment 1 at t1) and after 7 days (assessment 2 at t2). Data analysis was performed using IBMSPSS 23 statistical software.ResultsThe Cronbach’s alpha estimates of the HM-PRO for both assessment points (t1 and t2) were above 0.9 for Part A, and above 0.8 for Part B, showing strong stability of the measurement. The level of agreement for the reproducibility between the two assessments, using intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC), was very strong with Part A: ICC = 0.93 (95% CI = 0.90–0.95), and Part B: ICC = 0.91 (0.88–0.93). The ICC for the four domains of Part A ranged from 0.85–0.91. The ICC was greater than 0.8 for overall score of Part A and Part B for all the 10 diagnoses, confirming strong reliability.ConclusionThis study clearly indicates that the HM-PRO possesses strong test-retest reliability for both Part A and Part B. The Cronbach’s alpha confirmed acceptable internal consistency. The extensive reliability testing described in this study supports the generic nature of the HM-PRO for use in hematological malignancies in both routine clinical practice, to aid treatment decisions, as well as in research.

Highlights

  • Hematological Malignancies (HM) include neoplasms of myeloid and lymphoid cell lines (HMRN, 2004), with an expected UK incidence rate of 38,740 per annum (HMRN, 2014)

  • This indicated that the HM-patient-reported outcome measure (PRO) is well-balanced in both Part A and Part B, as no item carried too much weight

  • The HMPRO has been developed as a composite measure combining health-related QoL (HRQoL) and Symptoms scale for use in both clinical practice and research (Goswami et al, 2016)

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Summary

Introduction

Hematological Malignancies (HM) include neoplasms of myeloid and lymphoid cell lines (HMRN, 2004), with an expected UK incidence rate of 38,740 per annum (HMRN, 2014). A recent systematic literature review identified the healthrelated QoL (HRQoL) issues important to patients with HMs and the HRQoL instruments currently used in hematology (Goswami et al, 2019a). A new PRO measure, HM-PRO (hematological malignancy specific patient-reported outcome measure), has been recently developed to evaluate the HRQoL of patients with HMs in daily clinical practice as well as in research (Goswami et al, 2017; Goswami et al, 2020b; Goswami et al, 2020c). A new PRO measure, the HM-PRO (Hematological Malignancy Specific Patient-Reported Outcome Measure) has been recently developed to evaluate hematological malignancy (HM) patients’ health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and their symptom experience in daily clinical practice as well as in research. The objectives of the study were to assess: the internal consistency of the scores for Part A (impact) and its four domains (physical behavior; social well-being; emotional behavior; and eating and drinking habits) and Part B (signs and symptoms); and the test-retest reliability of the individual items of the newly developed hematological malignancy specific composite measure, the HM-PRO

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