Raising the standards of patient-centered outcomes research in myelodysplastic syndromes: Clinical utility and validation of the subscales of the QUALMS from the MDS-RIGHT project.

Efficace F; Koinig K; Cottone F; Bowen D; Mittelman M; Sommer K; Langemeijer S; Culligan D; Filanovsky K; Storck M; Smith A; van Marrewijk C; Dugas M; Stojkov I; Siebert U; Stauder R; de Witte T

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

We report a prospective international validation study of the Quality of Life in Myelodysplasia Scale (QUALMS) with a main focus on providing information on the psychometric characteristics of its three subscales: physical burden (QUALMS-P), emotional burden (QUALMS-E), and benefit finding (QUALMS-BF). The analysis is based on patients enrolled from three European countries and Israel, participating to the MDS-RIGHT Project. The scale structure and psychometric properties of the QUALMS were assessed.; Clinical decision-making for patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) is challenging, and both disease and treatment effects heavily impact health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of these patients. Therefore, disease-specific HRQoL measures can be critical to harness the patient voice in MDS research.; Our study provides additional validation data on the QUALMS from the international MDS-RIGHT Project. The use of this disease-specific HRQoL measure may contribute to raise quality standards of patient-centered outcomes research in MDS.; Overall, 270 patients with a median age of 74 years were analyzed and the majority of them (60.3%) had a low MDS-Comorbidity Index score. Results of the confirmatory factor analysis supported the underlying scale structure of the QUALMS, which, in addition to a total score, includes three subscales: QUALMS-P, QUALMS-E, and the QUALMS-BF. The QUALMS-P exhibited the highest Cronbach's alpha coefficients. Discriminant validity analysis indicated good results with the QUALMS-P and QUALMS-E distinguishing between patients with different performance status, comorbidity, anemia, and transfusion dependency status. No floor and ceiling effects were observed. Responsiveness to change analysis supported the validity of the measure. Patients with a hemoglobin (Hb) level of <11 g/dL at study entry, who subsequently showed an improvement in their Hb levels, also reported a mean score change of 9 and 8 points (scales ranging between 0 and 100) in the expected direction of the QUALMS-E and QUALMS-P, respectively. - METHODS - BACKGROUND - CONCLUSIONS - RESULTS

Details about the publication

JournalCancer medicine (Cancer Med)
Volume12
Issue6
Page range7529-7539
StatusPublished
Release year2022 (19/12/2022)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1002/cam4.5487
Link to the full texthttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cam4.5487
Keywordsmyelodysplasia; myelodysplastic syndromes; patient-reported outcomes; quality of life; questionnaire; symptom burden

Authors from the University of Münster

Dugas, Martin
Institute of Medical Informatics
Storck, Michael
Institute of Medical Informatics