The use of significant others as proxy raters of the quality of life of patients with brain cancer

被引:154
|
作者
Sneeuw, KCA
Aaronson, NK
Osoba, D
Muller, MJ
Hsu, MA
Yung, WKA
Brada, M
Newlands, ES
机构
[1] ANTONI VAN LEEUWENHOEK HOSP, NETHERLANDS CANC INST, NL-1066 CX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
[2] UNIV BRITISH COLUMBIA, VANCOUVER, BC V5Z 1M9, CANADA
[3] BRITISH COLUMBIA CANC AGCY, VANCOUVER, BC, CANADA
[4] INTEGRATED THERAPEUT INC, KENILWORTH, NJ USA
[5] UNIV TEXAS, MD ANDERSON CANCER CTR, HOUSTON, TX 77030 USA
[6] ROYAL MARSDEN HOSP, LONDON SW3 6JJ, ENGLAND
[7] CHARING CROSS HOSP, LONDON, ENGLAND
关键词
quality of life; proxy ratings; brain cancer;
D O I
10.1097/00005650-199705000-00006
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
OBJECTIVES. The use of self-report questionnaires for the assessment of health-related quality of Life (HRQOL) is increasingly common in clinical research. This method of data collection may be less suitable for patient groups who suffer from cognitive impairment, however, such as patients with brain cancer. In such cases, one can consider employing the patients' significant others as proxy raters of the patients' health-related quality of life. The authors examined the response agreement between patients with brain cancer and their significant others on a health-related quality of life instrument commonly used in cancer clinical trials, the EORTC QLQ-C30, and on a brain cancer-specific questionnaire module, the QLQ-BCM. METHODS. The study sample consisted of 103 pairs of patients, with either recently diagnosed or recurrent brain cancer, and their significant others (75% spouses, 22% relatives, and 3% friends). Patients and proxies independently completed the EORTC QLQ-C30 and the QLQ-BCM at three different times. RESULTS. Approximately 60% of the patient and proxy scores were in exact agreement, with more than 90% of scores being within one response category of each other. For most HRQOL dimensions assessed, moderate to good agreement was found. Statistically significant differences in mean scores were noted for several dimensions, with proxies tending to rate the patients as having a lower quality of life than the patients themselves. With the exception of fatigue ratings, this response bias was of a limited magnitude. Less agreement and a more pronounced response bias was observed for the more impaired patients, and particularly for patients exhibiting mental confusion. This finding was confirmed by longitudinal analyses, which indicated lower levels of patient-proxy agreement at follow-up for those patients whose physical or neurologic condition had deteriorated over time. CONCLUSIONS. In general, patients and their significant others provide similar ratings of the patients' quality of life. Lower levels of agreement and more biased ratings can be expected among those patients for whom the need for proxies is most salient. It is argued, however, that discrepancies between patient-proxy ratings should not be interpreted, a priori, as evidence of the inaccuracy or biased nature of proxy-generated data, Future studies ape needed to examine the relative validity and reliability of patient- versus proxy-generated health-related quality of life scores.
引用
收藏
页码:490 / 506
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Factors influencing agreement in symptom ratings by lung cancer patients and their significant others
    Wennman-Larsen, Agneta
    Tishelman, Carol
    Nengstrom, Yvonne
    Gustavsson, Petter
    JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT, 2007, 33 (02) : 146 - 155
  • [22] The development and psychometric validation of a brain cancer quality-of-life questionnaire for use in combination with general cancer-specific questionnaires
    Osoba, D
    Aaronson, NK
    Muller, M
    Sneeuw, K
    Hsu, MA
    Yung, WKA
    Brada, M
    Newlands, E
    QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH, 1996, 5 (01) : 139 - 150
  • [23] Distress, Depression, and the Effect of ZIP Code in Pancreaticobiliary Cancer Patients and Their Significant Others
    Yeo, Theresa P.
    Cannaday, Shawnna
    Thompson, Richard E.
    Fogg, Ryan
    Nevler, Avinoam
    Lavu, Harish
    Yeo, Charles J.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF SURGEONS, 2023, 236 (02) : 339 - 349
  • [24] Factors associated with health-related quality of life in patients and significant others one month after coronary artery bypass grafting
    Rantanen, Anja
    Kaunonen, Marja
    Sintonen, Harri
    Koivisto, Anna-Maija
    Astedt-Kurki, Paivi
    Tarkka, Marja-Terttu
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING, 2008, 17 (13) : 1742 - 1753
  • [25] Comparison of patient and proxy EORTC QLQ-C30 ratings in assessing the quality of life of cancer patients
    Sneeuw, KCA
    Aaronson, NK
    Sprangers, MAG
    Detmar, SB
    Wever, LDV
    Schornagel, JH
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1998, 51 (07) : 617 - 631
  • [26] SYMPTOMS AND QUALITY OF LIFE IN CANCER PATIENTS WITH BRAIN METASTASES FOLLOWING PALLIATIVE RADIOTHERAPY
    Wong, Jennifer
    Hird, Amanda
    Zhang, Liying
    Tsao, May
    Sinclair, Emily
    Barnes, Elizabeth
    Danjoux, Cyril
    Chow, Edward
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION ONCOLOGY BIOLOGY PHYSICS, 2009, 75 (04): : 1125 - 1131
  • [27] Health-Related Quality of Life in Traumatic Brain Injury: Is a Proxy Report Necessary?
    Machamer, Joan
    Temkin, Nancy
    Dikmen, Sureyya
    JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA, 2013, 30 (22) : 1845 - 1851
  • [28] Soypeptide supplementation attenuates weight loss and improves quality of life among brain cancer patients in a pilot study
    Amakye, William Kwame
    Huang, Chujun
    Xu, Zhenzhen
    Wang, Min
    Guo, Ji
    Mou, Yonggao
    Guo, Chengcheng
    Yang, Qunying
    Ma, Fang
    Li, Suyun
    Acheampong, Desmond Omane
    Nsiah-Asamoah, Christiana
    Ayensu, Jessica
    Agyapong, Nana Ama Frimpomaa
    Yuan, Erdong
    Yao, Maojin
    Ren, Jiaoyan
    FOOD FRONTIERS, 2023, 4 (03): : 1298 - 1310
  • [29] Quality of life and radiotherapy in brain metastasis patients
    Fernandez, Goncalo
    Pocinho, Rute
    Travancinha, Catarina
    Netto, Eduardo
    Roldao, Margarida
    REPORTS OF PRACTICAL ONCOLOGY AND RADIOTHERAPY, 2012, 17 (05) : 281 - 287
  • [30] Quality of life for older patients with cancer: a review of the evidence supporting melatonin use
    Ginzac, Angeline
    Dubois, Sophie
    Hager, Marie-Odile
    Kwiatkowski, Fabrice
    Passildas, Judith
    Biau, Julian
    Abrial, Catherine
    Mouret-Reynier, Marie-Ange
    Thivat, Emilie
    Durando, Xavier
    AGING CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, 2020, 32 (12) : 2459 - 2468