Reliability and validity of PRO-CTCAE® daily reporting with a 24-hour recall period

M. K. Lee, E. Basch, S. A. Mitchell, L. M. Minasian, B. T. Langlais, G. Thanarajasingam, B. F. Ginos, L. J. Rogak, T. R. Mendoza, A. V. Bennett, D. Schrag, G. L. Mazza, A. C. Dueck

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Purpose: The standard recall period for the patient-reported outcomes version of the common terminology criteria for adverse events (PRO-CTCAE®) is the past 7 days, but there are contexts where a 24-hour recall may be desirable. The purpose of this analysis was to investigate the reliability and validity of a subset of PRO-CTCAE items captured using a 24-hour recall. Methods: 27 PRO-CTCAE items representing 14 symptomatic adverse events (AEs) were collected using both a 24-hour recall (24 h) and the standard 7 day recall (7d) in a sample of patients receiving active cancer treatment (n = 113). Using data captured with a PRO-CTCAE-24h on days 6 and 7, and 20 and 21, we computed intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC); an ICC ≥ 0.70 was interpreted as demonstrating high test–retest reliability. Correlations between PRO-CTCAE-24h items on day 7 and conceptually relevant EORTC QLQ-C30 domains were examined. In responsiveness analysis, patients were deemed changed if they had a one-point or greater change in the corresponding PRO-CTCAE-7d item (from week 0 to week 1). Results: PRO-CTCAE-24h captured on two consecutive days demonstrated that 21 of 27 items (78%) had ICCs ≥ 0.70 (day 6/7 median ICC 0.76), (day 20/21 median ICC 0.84). Median correlation between attributes within a common AE was 0.75, and the median correlation between conceptually relevant EORTC QLQ-C30 domains and PRO-CTCAE-24 h items captured on day 7 was 0.44. In the analysis of responsiveness to change, the median standardized response mean (SRM) for patients with improvement was − 0.52 and that for patients with worsening was 0.71. Conclusion: A 24-hour recall period for PRO-CTCAE items has acceptable measurement properties and can inform day-to-day variations in symptomatic AEs when daily PRO-CTCAE administration is implemented in a clinical trial.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)2047-2058
Number of pages12
JournalQuality of Life Research
Volume32
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2023

Keywords

  • 24-hour recall
  • Daily diary
  • PRO-CTCAE
  • Reliability
  • Validity

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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