Cargando…

Patients’ and clinicians’ perspectives on item importance, scoring, and clinically meaningful differences for the Endometriosis Symptom Diary (ESD) and Endometriosis Impact Scale (EIS)

BACKGROUND: The Endometriosis Symptom Diary (ESD) and Endometriosis Impact Scale (EIS) are patient-reported outcome measures developed to evaluate efficacy in clinical trials and clinical practice. The ESD is a daily electronic diary assessing symptom severity; the EIS is a weekly electronic diary a...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kitchen, Helen, Seitz, Christian, Trigg, Andrew, Aldhouse, Natalie, Willgoss, Thomas, Schmitz, Heinz, Gater, Adam, Gerlinger, Christoph, Haberland, Claudia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7789138/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33407560
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12955-020-01579-7
_version_ 1783633172180762624
author Kitchen, Helen
Seitz, Christian
Trigg, Andrew
Aldhouse, Natalie
Willgoss, Thomas
Schmitz, Heinz
Gater, Adam
Gerlinger, Christoph
Haberland, Claudia
author_facet Kitchen, Helen
Seitz, Christian
Trigg, Andrew
Aldhouse, Natalie
Willgoss, Thomas
Schmitz, Heinz
Gater, Adam
Gerlinger, Christoph
Haberland, Claudia
author_sort Kitchen, Helen
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The Endometriosis Symptom Diary (ESD) and Endometriosis Impact Scale (EIS) are patient-reported outcome measures developed to evaluate efficacy in clinical trials and clinical practice. The ESD is a daily electronic diary assessing symptom severity; the EIS is a weekly electronic diary assessing symptom impact. This study explored the importance of symptoms (ESD items) and impacts (EIS domains), perspectives on scoring algorithms, and clinically important difference (CID) thresholds to inform clinical trial score interpretation. METHODS: Endometriosis patients in Germany (n = 8) and the US (n = 17), and expert clinicians (n = 4) in Germany, the US, Spain, and Finland participated in semi-structured qualitative interviews comprising structured tasks. Interview transcripts were analyzed using thematic analysis techniques. RESULTS: Quality and severity of endometriosis-associated pelvic pain varied considerably among patients; some experienced pelvic pain daily, others during menstrual bleeding (dysmenorrhea) only. Patients and clinicians ranked “worst pelvic pain” as the most meaningful pain concept assessed by the ESD, followed by constant and short-term pelvic pain. Preferences for summarizing daily pain scores over the 28-day menstrual cycle depended on individuals’ experience of pain: patients experiencing pain daily preferred scores summarizing data for all 28 days; patients primarily experiencing pain during selected days, and their treating clinicians preferred scores based on the most severe pain days. Initial CID exploration for the “worst pelvic pain” 0–10 numerical rating scale (0–10 NRS) revealed that, for most patients, a 2- or 3-point reduction was considered meaningful, depending on baseline severity. Patients and clinicians ranked “emotional well-being” and “limitations in physical activities” as the most important EIS domains. CONCLUSIONS: This study informs the use of the ESD and EIS as clinically relevant measures of endometriosis symptoms and their impact. Findings from the ESD highlight the importance of individual-patient assessment of pain experience and identify “worst pelvic pain” as the most meaningful symptom assessed. Aggregating scores over the 28-day menstrual cycle may inform meaningful endpoints for clinical trials. Diverse EIS concepts (e.g. impact on emotional well-being and physical activities) are meaningful to patients and clinicians, emphasizing the importance of evaluating the impact on both to comprehensively assess treatment efficacy and decisions. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Not applicable. Qualitative, non-interventional study; registration not required.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7789138
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-77891382021-01-07 Patients’ and clinicians’ perspectives on item importance, scoring, and clinically meaningful differences for the Endometriosis Symptom Diary (ESD) and Endometriosis Impact Scale (EIS) Kitchen, Helen Seitz, Christian Trigg, Andrew Aldhouse, Natalie Willgoss, Thomas Schmitz, Heinz Gater, Adam Gerlinger, Christoph Haberland, Claudia Health Qual Life Outcomes Research BACKGROUND: The Endometriosis Symptom Diary (ESD) and Endometriosis Impact Scale (EIS) are patient-reported outcome measures developed to evaluate efficacy in clinical trials and clinical practice. The ESD is a daily electronic diary assessing symptom severity; the EIS is a weekly electronic diary assessing symptom impact. This study explored the importance of symptoms (ESD items) and impacts (EIS domains), perspectives on scoring algorithms, and clinically important difference (CID) thresholds to inform clinical trial score interpretation. METHODS: Endometriosis patients in Germany (n = 8) and the US (n = 17), and expert clinicians (n = 4) in Germany, the US, Spain, and Finland participated in semi-structured qualitative interviews comprising structured tasks. Interview transcripts were analyzed using thematic analysis techniques. RESULTS: Quality and severity of endometriosis-associated pelvic pain varied considerably among patients; some experienced pelvic pain daily, others during menstrual bleeding (dysmenorrhea) only. Patients and clinicians ranked “worst pelvic pain” as the most meaningful pain concept assessed by the ESD, followed by constant and short-term pelvic pain. Preferences for summarizing daily pain scores over the 28-day menstrual cycle depended on individuals’ experience of pain: patients experiencing pain daily preferred scores summarizing data for all 28 days; patients primarily experiencing pain during selected days, and their treating clinicians preferred scores based on the most severe pain days. Initial CID exploration for the “worst pelvic pain” 0–10 numerical rating scale (0–10 NRS) revealed that, for most patients, a 2- or 3-point reduction was considered meaningful, depending on baseline severity. Patients and clinicians ranked “emotional well-being” and “limitations in physical activities” as the most important EIS domains. CONCLUSIONS: This study informs the use of the ESD and EIS as clinically relevant measures of endometriosis symptoms and their impact. Findings from the ESD highlight the importance of individual-patient assessment of pain experience and identify “worst pelvic pain” as the most meaningful symptom assessed. Aggregating scores over the 28-day menstrual cycle may inform meaningful endpoints for clinical trials. Diverse EIS concepts (e.g. impact on emotional well-being and physical activities) are meaningful to patients and clinicians, emphasizing the importance of evaluating the impact on both to comprehensively assess treatment efficacy and decisions. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Not applicable. Qualitative, non-interventional study; registration not required. BioMed Central 2021-01-06 /pmc/articles/PMC7789138/ /pubmed/33407560 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12955-020-01579-7 Text en © The Author(s) 2020 Open AccessThis article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated in a credit line to the data.
spellingShingle Research
Kitchen, Helen
Seitz, Christian
Trigg, Andrew
Aldhouse, Natalie
Willgoss, Thomas
Schmitz, Heinz
Gater, Adam
Gerlinger, Christoph
Haberland, Claudia
Patients’ and clinicians’ perspectives on item importance, scoring, and clinically meaningful differences for the Endometriosis Symptom Diary (ESD) and Endometriosis Impact Scale (EIS)
title Patients’ and clinicians’ perspectives on item importance, scoring, and clinically meaningful differences for the Endometriosis Symptom Diary (ESD) and Endometriosis Impact Scale (EIS)
title_full Patients’ and clinicians’ perspectives on item importance, scoring, and clinically meaningful differences for the Endometriosis Symptom Diary (ESD) and Endometriosis Impact Scale (EIS)
title_fullStr Patients’ and clinicians’ perspectives on item importance, scoring, and clinically meaningful differences for the Endometriosis Symptom Diary (ESD) and Endometriosis Impact Scale (EIS)
title_full_unstemmed Patients’ and clinicians’ perspectives on item importance, scoring, and clinically meaningful differences for the Endometriosis Symptom Diary (ESD) and Endometriosis Impact Scale (EIS)
title_short Patients’ and clinicians’ perspectives on item importance, scoring, and clinically meaningful differences for the Endometriosis Symptom Diary (ESD) and Endometriosis Impact Scale (EIS)
title_sort patients’ and clinicians’ perspectives on item importance, scoring, and clinically meaningful differences for the endometriosis symptom diary (esd) and endometriosis impact scale (eis)
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7789138/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33407560
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12955-020-01579-7
work_keys_str_mv AT kitchenhelen patientsandcliniciansperspectivesonitemimportancescoringandclinicallymeaningfuldifferencesfortheendometriosissymptomdiaryesdandendometriosisimpactscaleeis
AT seitzchristian patientsandcliniciansperspectivesonitemimportancescoringandclinicallymeaningfuldifferencesfortheendometriosissymptomdiaryesdandendometriosisimpactscaleeis
AT triggandrew patientsandcliniciansperspectivesonitemimportancescoringandclinicallymeaningfuldifferencesfortheendometriosissymptomdiaryesdandendometriosisimpactscaleeis
AT aldhousenatalie patientsandcliniciansperspectivesonitemimportancescoringandclinicallymeaningfuldifferencesfortheendometriosissymptomdiaryesdandendometriosisimpactscaleeis
AT willgossthomas patientsandcliniciansperspectivesonitemimportancescoringandclinicallymeaningfuldifferencesfortheendometriosissymptomdiaryesdandendometriosisimpactscaleeis
AT schmitzheinz patientsandcliniciansperspectivesonitemimportancescoringandclinicallymeaningfuldifferencesfortheendometriosissymptomdiaryesdandendometriosisimpactscaleeis
AT gateradam patientsandcliniciansperspectivesonitemimportancescoringandclinicallymeaningfuldifferencesfortheendometriosissymptomdiaryesdandendometriosisimpactscaleeis
AT gerlingerchristoph patientsandcliniciansperspectivesonitemimportancescoringandclinicallymeaningfuldifferencesfortheendometriosissymptomdiaryesdandendometriosisimpactscaleeis
AT haberlandclaudia patientsandcliniciansperspectivesonitemimportancescoringandclinicallymeaningfuldifferencesfortheendometriosissymptomdiaryesdandendometriosisimpactscaleeis