Measuring symptoms in gastrointestinal cancer:
a systematic review of assessment instruments
Abstract
Purpose
It is critical for
gastrointestinal cancer researchers and clinicians to have access to
comprehensive, sensitive and simple-to-use symptom measures that allow
them to understand and quantify the subjective patient experience.
Development and validation of such scales requires training in
psychometrics and occasionally uses technical jargon that can be
difficult to penetrate. This review evaluates existing measures of
gastrointestinal cancer symptoms, provides tool descriptions, and uses
predefined, objective quality criteria to rate psychometric quality and
facilitate tool choices for researchers and clinicians.
Methods
MEDLINE, EMBASE,
CINAHL, and PsycINFO databases were systematically reviewed for scales
assessing gastrointestinal cancer and gastrointestinal cancer
site-specific symptoms. Evaluation criteria were the following: breadth
of domain coverage (content validity), high internal consistency (α ≥ .80), sensitivity to change, and extent of validation.
Results
In n = 36 validation studies, 26 gastrointestinal cancer symptom measures were identified. Of these, n
= 13 tools met criteria for recommendation, and six in particular showed
strong psychometric properties. The Functional Assessment of Cancer
Therapy-Colorectal (FACT-C), European Organization for Research and
Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) gastric cancer module (QLQ-STO22),
FACT-Hepatobiliary (FACT-Hep), and EORTC oesophagus, oesophago-gastric
junction and stomach module (QLQ OG-25) were identified as the most
comprehensive and best validated scales for each of the major
gastrointestinal cancer sites. The FACT-Colorectal Symptom Index
(FCSI-9) and the National Comprehensive Cancer Network
(NCCN) FACT-Hepatobiliary Symptom Index (FHSI-18) were specifically
validated in patients with advanced colorectal and liver cancer and also
demonstrated superior psychometric properties.
Conclusions
Several
comprehensive, well-validated scales exist to adequately assess
gastrointestinal cancer site-specific symptoms. Specifically,
gastrointestinal cancer submodules of the FACT quality of life
questionnaire represent adequate tool choices in most instances and
overall, were better validated than the respective EORTC tools. Further
improvement of existing, highly rated measures is recommended.
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