Can patient-reported outcomes be used instead of clinician-reported outcomes and photographs as primary endpoints of late normal tissue effects in breast radiotherapy trials? Results from the IMPORT LOW trial

•Few patients reported moderate/marked normal tissue effects (NTE) irrespective of assessment method used.•Patients reported more NTE than clinician-reported outcomes or photographs.•Concordance was poor on an individual patient level.•Treatment comparisons were consistent between assessment methods...

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Veröffentlicht in:Radiotherapy and oncology 2019-05, Vol.134, p.220-230
Hauptverfasser: Bhattacharya, Indrani S., Haviland, Joanne S., Hopwood, Penelope, Coles, Charlotte E., Yarnold, John R., Bliss, Judith M., Kirby, Anna M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Few patients reported moderate/marked normal tissue effects (NTE) irrespective of assessment method used.•Patients reported more NTE than clinician-reported outcomes or photographs.•Concordance was poor on an individual patient level.•Treatment comparisons were consistent between assessment methods. In an era of low local relapse rates after adjuvant breast radiotherapy, risks of late normal-tissue effects (NTE) need to be balanced against risk of relapse. NTE are assessed using patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs), clinician-reported outcomes (CRO) and photographs. This analysis investigates whether PROMs can be used as primary NTE endpoints in breast radiotherapy trials. Analyses were conducted within IMPORT LOW (ISRCTN12852634) at 2 and 5 years. NTE were recorded by CRO, photographs and PROMs. Measures of agreement tested concordance, risk ratios for radiotherapy groups were compared, and influence of baseline characteristics on concordance investigated. In 1095 patients who consented to PROMS and photographs, PROMs were available at 2 and/or 5 years for 976 patients, of whom 909 had CRO and 844 had photographs. Few patients had moderate/marked NTE, irrespective of method used (eg. 19% patients and 9% clinicians reported breast shrinkage at year-5). Patients reported more NTE than assessed from CRO or photographs (p 
ISSN:0167-8140
1879-0887
DOI:10.1016/j.radonc.2019.01.036