Optimal assessment of quality of life for patients with prostate cancer.
Logan G BriggsDaniel Sentana-LledoDaniel E LageQuoc-Dien TrinhAlicia K MorgansPublished in: Therapeutic advances in medical oncology (2022)
The burden of cancer and oncologic treatment is reflected not only through morbidity and mortality, but also through impacts on patient quality of life (QoL). However, QoL has not been historically measured or addressed with the same rigorous methodology as traditional disease-related outcomes such as overall survival and progression, as these are driven by objective measurements and events. Prostate cancer (PCa) is one of the most prevalent non-cutaneous cancers in men around the world. Both the cancer and its treatment significantly impact patients' physical, emotional, sexual, social, and overall QoL. Ensuring assessment and integration of QoL in research and clinical care enables improvement in treatment outcomes that matter most to patients while also facilitating alignment of healthcare priorities with reimbursements. Great strides toward this end have been made over the last decade, but significant room for improvement remains. To ensure high quality, reliable data collection, QoL assessment tools must be psychometrically validated, standardized, widely implemented across trials, and regularly assessed to allow internal and external validity, longitudinal comparative effectiveness research, and quality control. Additional consideration should be taken for instruments used to measure the aspects of QoL specific to minority, caregiver, and elderly populations. Open clinical questions include how providers should weight changes in different QoL subscales and how clinically meaningful difference thresholds should be defined. Review of ongoing clinical trials encouragingly reveals an increased focus on measuring and improving QoL for men with PCa which will inform the way we utilize QoL assessments. However, additional efforts herein described are needed to fully optimize these processes. In summary, this review will explain the rationale for QoL assessments in PCa populations, discuss requirements for effective implementation, describe considerations for vulnerable and under-evaluated populations, and summarize ongoing clinical trials assessing patient QoL.
Keyphrases
- prostate cancer
- healthcare
- clinical trial
- end stage renal disease
- radical prostatectomy
- mental health
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- prognostic factors
- physical activity
- palliative care
- quality improvement
- papillary thyroid
- case report
- primary care
- quality control
- social media
- metabolic syndrome
- cross sectional
- patient reported outcomes
- combination therapy
- robot assisted
- pain management
- chronic pain
- artificial intelligence
- electronic health record
- health insurance