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Evaluating patient-reported symptoms and late adverse effects following completion of first-line chemotherapy for ovarian cancer using the MOST (Measure of Ovarian Symptoms and Treatment concerns)

Vanessa L. Beesley, Tanya L. Ross, Madeleine King, Rachel Campbell, Christina M. Nagle, Andreas Obermair, Peter Grant, Anna DeFazio, Penelope M. Webb, Michael Friedländer

2021Gynecologic Oncology35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Knowledge on the course of symptoms patients with ovarian cancer experience is limited. We documented the prevalence and trajectories of symptoms after first-line chemotherapy using the Measure of Ovarian Symptoms and Treatment concerns (MOST). METHODS: A total of 726 patients who received platinum-based chemotherapy for ovarian cancer were asked to complete the MOST every 3 months, beginning 6 months post-diagnosis and continuing for up to 4 years. We used descriptive statistics to examine temporal changes in MOST-S26 index scores for disease or treatment-related (MOST-DorT), neurotoxicity (MOST-NTx), abdominal (MOST-Abdo), and psychological (MOST-Psych) symptoms, and wellbeing (MOST-Wellbeing) and selected individual symptoms. We used group-based trajectory models to identify groups with persistently poor symptoms. RESULTS: The median MOST-Abdo, MOST-DorT and MOST-Wellbeing score were worst at chemotherapy-end but improved and stabilised by 1, 3 and 12 months after treatment, respectively. The median MOST-NTx score peaked at 1 month after treatment before improving, while the median MOST-Psych score did not change substantially over time. Long-term moderate-to-severe fatigue (32%), trouble sleeping (31%), sore hands and feet (21%), pins and needles (20%) and anxiety (18%) were common. Trajectory models revealed groups of patients with persistent symptoms had MOST-DorT scores above 30 and MOST-NTx scores above 40 at treatment-end. CONCLUSIONS: Although many patients report improvements in symptoms by 3 months after first-line chemotherapy for ovarian cancer, patients who score > 30/100 on MOST-S26-DorT or > 40/100 on MOST-S26-NTx at the end of chemotherapy are likely to have persistent symptoms. The MOST could triage this at-risk subset for early intervention.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineOvarian cancerChemotherapyAdverse effectCancerAnxietyDiseaseInternal medicinePsychiatryCancer survivorship and carePARP inhibition in cancer therapyOvarian cancer diagnosis and treatment
Evaluating patient-reported symptoms and late adverse effects following completion of first-line chemotherapy for ovarian cancer using the MOST (Measure of Ovarian Symptoms and Treatment concerns) | Litcius