Litcius/Paper detail

Additional Value of Patient-Reported Symptom Monitoring in Cancer Care: A Systematic Review of the Literature

Luís Lizán, Lucía Pérez–Carbonell, Marta Comellas

2021Cancers73 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: To describe the benefit of patient-reported symptom monitoring on clinical, other patient-reported, and economic outcomes. METHODS: We conducted a systematic literature review using Medline/PubMed, limited to original articles published between 2011 and 2021 in English and Spanish, and focused on the benefit of patient-reported symptom monitoring on cancer patients. RESULTS: We identified 16 reports that deal with the benefit of patient-reported symptom monitoring (collected mostly electronically) on different outcomes. Five studies showed that patient-reported symptom surveillance led to significantly improved survival compared with usual care-mainly through better symptom control, early detection of tumor recurrence, and extended chemotherapy use. Additionally, three evaluations demonstrated an improvement in Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQoL) associated with this monitoring strategy, specifically by reducing symptom severity. Additionally, six studies observed that this monitoring approach prevented unplanned emergency room visits and hospital readmissions, leading to a substantial decrease in healthcare usage. CONCLUSIONS: There is consistent evidence across the studies that patient-reported symptom monitoring might entail a substantial survival benefit for cancer patients, better HRQoL, and a considerable decrease in healthcare usage. Nonetheless, more studies should be conducted to demonstrate their effectiveness in addition to their cost-effectiveness in clinical practice.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMEDLINEIntensive care medicineHealth careQuality of life (healthcare)CancerSystematic reviewEmergency medicineInternal medicineNursingEconomic growthLawPolitical scienceEconomicsCancer survivorship and careGlobal Cancer Incidence and ScreeningCancer-related cognitive impairment studies