Clinician-reported symptomatic adverse events in cancer trials are they concordant with patient-reported outcomes?
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| Publication date | 04-2019 |
| Journal | Journal of Comparative Effectiveness Research |
| Volume | Issue number | 8 | 5 |
| Pages (from-to) | 279-288 |
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| Abstract |
AIM: We investigate the concordance, in terms of favoring the same treatment arm, between clinician-reported symptomatic adverse events (AEs) and information obtained via patient-reported outcomes (PRO) measures in cancer randomized controlled trials (RCTs). METHODS: We conducted a systematic literature search to identify all RCTs conducted in breast, colorectal, lung and prostate cancer, published between 2004 and 2017. RESULTS: We identified 207 RCTs. In the majority of RCTs (n=133, 64.2%) a discordance between PROs and AEs was found. In 104 studies (50.2%), PRO data favored the experimental arm when AEs did not, while the opposite situation was found in 29 trials (14.0%). CONCLUSION: Frequently, information obtained via PRO measures and clinician-reported AEs do not favor the same treatment arm in RCT settings. |
| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.2217/cer-2018-0092 |
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