Factors associated with health-related quality of life (HRQoL) deterioration in glioma patients during the progression-free survival period

authors

  • Coomans Marijke
  • Dirven Linda
  • Aaronson Neil
  • Baumert Brigitta
  • van den Bent Martin
  • Bottomley Andrew
  • Brandes Alba
  • Chinot Olivier
  • Coens Corneel
  • Gorlia Thierry
  • Herrlinger Ulrich
  • Keime-Guibert Florence
  • Malmström Annika
  • Martinelli Francesca
  • Stupp Roger
  • Talacchi Andrea
  • Weller Michael
  • Wick Wolfgang
  • Reijneveld Jaap
  • Taphoorn Martin

document type

ART

abstract

Abstract Background Maintenance of functioning and well-being during the progression-free survival (PFS) period is important for glioma patients. This study aimed to determine whether health-related quality of life (HRQoL) can be maintained during progression-free time, and factors associated with HRQoL deterioration in this period. Methods We included longitudinal HRQoL data from previously published clinical trials in glioma. The percentage of patients with stable HRQoL until progression was determined per scale and at the individual patient level (i.e. considering all scales simultaneously). We assessed time to a clinically relevant deterioration in HRQoL, expressed in deterioration-free survival and time-to-deterioration (the first including progression as an event). We also determined the association between sociodemographic and clinical factors and HRQoL deterioration in the progression-free period. Results Five thousand five hundred and thirty-nine patients with at least baseline HRQoL scores had a median time from randomization to progression of 7.6 months. Between 9–29% of the patients deteriorated before disease progression on the evaluated HRQoL scales. When considering all scales simultaneously, 47% of patients deteriorated on ≥1 scale. Median deterioration-free survival period ranged between 3.8–5.4 months, and median time-to-deterioration between 8.2–11.9 months. For most scales, only poor performance status was independently associated with clinically relevant HRQoL deterioration in the progression-free period. Conclusions HRQoL was maintained in only 53% of patients in their progression-free period, and treatment was not independently associated with this deterioration in HRQoL. Routine monitoring of the patients’ functioning and well-being during the entire disease course is therefore important, so that interventions can be initiated when problems are signaled.

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