Psychometric Evaluation of the PNH Symptom Questionnaire (PNH-SQ) Among Patients with Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria from Three Phase 2 Clinical Trials with Pozelimab Monotherapy or in Combination with Cemdisiran

Background: Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) is a rare, acquired, life-threatening disease caused by chronic dysregulation of the complement system. PNH has a high symptom burden with significant impacts on the life of a patient. The PNH Symptom Questionnaire (PNH-SQ) is a PNH-specific pati...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Blood 2023-11, Vol.142 (Supplement 1), p.3752-3752
Hauptverfasser: Hartford, Chris, Eusebi, Paolo, Kelly, Richard J., Alin, Thibaud, Yang, Xinyu, Regnault, Antoine, Delevry, Dimittri, Lum, Ching, Rofail, Diana
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Background: Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) is a rare, acquired, life-threatening disease caused by chronic dysregulation of the complement system. PNH has a high symptom burden with significant impacts on the life of a patient. The PNH Symptom Questionnaire (PNH-SQ) is a PNH-specific patient-reported outcome (PRO) questionnaire designed to assess daily symptom severity in patients with PNH. The objective of this current study was to evaluate PNH-SQ psychometric properties among patients with PNH from three phase 2 clinical trials with pozelimab monotherapy or in combination with cemdisiran. Methods: PRO data from three phase 2 PNH clinical trials, study 1852 (NCT03946748; pozelimab monotherapy; n=24), study 2092 (NCT04811716; combination therapy; n=24), and study 20105 (NCT04888507; combination therapy; n=6), were used for analysis. The PNH-SQ is a patient-reported daily diary that assesses 10 core symptoms of PNH using a five-point severity scale (none; very mild; mild; moderate; severe; very severe) for fatigue, shortness of breath, muscle weakness, headaches, abdominal pain, pain in back or legs, and chest discomfort, and a five-point difficulty scale (none, not at all, a little bit, somewhat, quite, very) for difficulty sleeping, difficulty thinking clearly, and difficulty swallowing. Prespecified psychometric analyses were performed after study database lock using blinded data. Analyses included quality of completion (ie ePRO prevented item-level missingness) and item responses over time. Reliability and validity of daily assessments with classical test theory (internal consistency and test-retest reliability, construct validity by observing correlations between pairs of PNH-SQ items and of the PNH-SQ daily score with other PRO scores from the EORTC QLQ-C30, FACIT-Fatigue and EQ-5D) and Rasch measurement theory (RMT) analyses were conducted. Test-retest reliability (within stable patients 4 weeks apart) and construct validity of various exploratory methods for aggregating daily scores over time were assessed. Results: Completion rates of PNH-SQ items were higher in studies 20105 and 2092 (at Day 1: 54.2% in 1852 vs 83.3% in 20105 and 91.7% in 2092). Fatigue was consistently the most experienced symptom at baseline of the three studies, while difficulty swallowing was not experienced by any patient. A high proportion of ‘none’ responses were observed across all assessments. Cronbach's alpha calculated using all daily assessments was 0.75, in
ISSN:0006-4971
1528-0020
DOI:10.1182/blood-2023-181667