Recommendations on the use of item libraries for patient-reported outcome measurement in oncology trials: findings from an international, multidisciplinary working group

The use of item libraries for patient-reported outcome (PRO) measurement in oncology allows for the customisation of PRO assessment to measure key health-related quality of life concepts of relevance to the target population and intervention. However, no high-level recommendations exist to guide use...

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Veröffentlicht in:The lancet oncology 2023-02, Vol.24 (2), p.e86-e95
Hauptverfasser: Piccinin, Claire, Basch, Ethan, Bhatnagar, Vishal, Calvert, Melanie, Campbell, Alicyn, Cella, David, Cleeland, Charles S, Coens, Corneel, Darlington, Anne-Sophie, Dueck, Amylou C, Groenvold, Mogens, Herold, Ralf, King-Kallimanis, Bellinda L, Kluetz, Paul G, Kuliś, Dagmara, O'Connor, Daniel, Oliver, Kathy, Pe, Madeline, Reeve, Bryce B, Reijneveld, Jaap C, Wang, Xin Shelley, Bottomley, Andrew
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The use of item libraries for patient-reported outcome (PRO) measurement in oncology allows for the customisation of PRO assessment to measure key health-related quality of life concepts of relevance to the target population and intervention. However, no high-level recommendations exist to guide users on the design and implementation of these customised PRO measures (item lists) across different PRO measurement systems. To address this issue, a working group was set up, including international stakeholders (academic, independent, industry, health technology assessment, regulatory, and patient advocacy), with the goal of creating recommendations for the use of item libraries in oncology trials. A scoping review was carried out to identify relevant publications and highlight any gaps. Stakeholders commented on the available guidance for each research question, proposed recommendations on how to address gaps in the literature, and came to an agreement using discussion-based methods. Nine primary research questions were identified that formed the scope and structure of the recommendations on how to select items and implement item lists created from item libraries. These recommendations address methods to drive item selection, plan the structure and analysis of item lists, and facilitate their use in conjunction with other measures. The findings resulted in high-level, instrument-agnostic recommendations on the use of item-library-derived item lists in oncology trials.
ISSN:1470-2045
1474-5488
DOI:10.1016/S1470-2045(22)00654-4