Exploring the Potential of Electronic Patient-Reported Outcome Measures to Inform and Assess Care in Sarcoma Centers : A Longitudinal Multicenter Pilot Study
Date Issued
2024-11
Author(s)
Geese, Franziska
Kaufmann, Sabine
Sivanathan, Mayuri
Sairanen, Kati
Klenke, Frank
Krieg, Andreas H.
Müller, Daniel
Type
Article
Language
English
Abstract
Background: Electronic patient-reported outcome measures (ePROMs) are useful tools to assess care needs of patients diagnosed with cancer and tomonitor their symptoms along the illness trajectory. Studies regarding the application of ePROMs by advanced practice nurses (APNs) specialized in sarcoma care and the use of such electronic measures for care planning and assessing quality of care are lacking. Objective: To explore the
potential of ePROMs in clinical practice for assessing the patient’s quality of life, physical functionality, needs, and fear of progression, as well as distress and the quality of care in sarcoma centers. Methods: A multicenter longitudinal pilot study design was chosen. Three sarcoma centers with and without APN service located in Switzerland were included. The instruments EQ-5D-5L, Pearman Mayo Survey of Needs, the National Comprehensive Cancer Network Distress Thermometer, PA-F12, and Toronto Extremity Salvage Score were used as ePROMs. Data were analyzed descriptively. Results: Overall, 55 patients participated in the pilot study; 33 (60%) received an intervention by an APN, and 22 (40%) did not. Patients in sarcoma centers with APN service reported overall higher scores in quality of life and functional outcome. The number of needs and distress level were lower in sarcoma centers with APN service. No differences were found with respect to patients’ fear of progression. Conclusions: Most of the ePROMs proved to be reasonable in clinical
potential of ePROMs in clinical practice for assessing the patient’s quality of life, physical functionality, needs, and fear of progression, as well as distress and the quality of care in sarcoma centers. Methods: A multicenter longitudinal pilot study design was chosen. Three sarcoma centers with and without APN service located in Switzerland were included. The instruments EQ-5D-5L, Pearman Mayo Survey of Needs, the National Comprehensive Cancer Network Distress Thermometer, PA-F12, and Toronto Extremity Salvage Score were used as ePROMs. Data were analyzed descriptively. Results: Overall, 55 patients participated in the pilot study; 33 (60%) received an intervention by an APN, and 22 (40%) did not. Patients in sarcoma centers with APN service reported overall higher scores in quality of life and functional outcome. The number of needs and distress level were lower in sarcoma centers with APN service. No differences were found with respect to patients’ fear of progression. Conclusions: Most of the ePROMs proved to be reasonable in clinical
Subjects
R Medicine (General)
RC Internal medicine
RC0254 Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology (including Cancer)
Publisher DOI
Journal or Serie
Cancer Nursing
ISSN
1538-9804
Organization
University Hospital of Bern
University Hospital of Basel
University Hospital of Zurich
Universitätsklinik Balgrist
University Children’s Hospital Basel
Volume
47
Issue
6
Publisher
Wolters Kluwer
Submitter
Schmitt, Kai-Uwe
Citation apa
Geese, F., Kaufmann, S., Sivanathan, M., Sairanen, K., Klenke, F., Krieg, A. H., Müller, D., & Schmitt, K.-U. (2024). Exploring the Potential of Electronic Patient-Reported Outcome Measures to Inform and Assess Care in Sarcoma Centers : A Longitudinal Multicenter Pilot Study. In Cancer Nursing (Vol. 47, Issue 6, pp. 395–403). Wolters Kluwer. https://doi.org/10.24451/dspace/11193
File(s)![Thumbnail Image]()
Loading...
restricted
Name
geese-prom-sarcoma-2024.pdf
License
Publisher
Version
published
Size
981.27 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
416ed85b2dd57aa2361504c21cbbbcfa
