• Support Care Cancer · Nov 2011

    Minimal important differences for interpreting health-related quality of life scores from the EORTC QLQ-C30 in lung cancer patients participating in randomized controlled trials.

    • John T Maringwa, Chantal Quinten, Madeleine King, Jolie Ringash, David Osoba, Corneel Coens, Francesca Martinelli, Jurgen Vercauteren, Charles S Cleeland, Henning Flechtner, Carolyn Gotay, Eva Greimel, Martin J Taphoorn, Bryce B Reeve, Joseph Schmucker-Von Koch, Joachim Weis, Egbert F Smit, Jan P van Meerbeeck, Andrew Bottomley, and EORTC PROBE project and the Lung Cancer Group.
    • Quality of Life Department, EORTC, Brussels, Belgium. john.maringwa@eortc.be
    • Support Care Cancer. 2011 Nov 1;19(11):1753-60.

    BackgroundThe aim of this study was to determine the smallest changes in health-related quality of life (HRQOL) scores in a subset of the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire core 30 (EORTC QLQ-C30) scales, which could be considered as clinically meaningful in patients with non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC).MethodsWHO performance status (PS) and weight change were used as clinical anchors to determine minimal important differences (MIDs) in HRQOL change scores (range, 0-100) in the EORTC QLQ-C30 scales. Selected distribution-based methods were used for comparison.FindingsIn a pooled dataset of 812 NSCLC patients undergoing treatment, the values determined to represent the MID depended on whether patients were improving or deteriorating. MID estimates for improvement (based on a one-category change in PS, 5 - <20% weight gain) were physical functioning (9, 5); role functioning (14, 7); social functioning (5, 7); global health status (9, 4); fatigue (14, 5); and pain (16, 2). The respective MID estimates for deterioration (based on PS, weight loss) were physical (4, 6); role (5, 5); social (7, 9); global health status (4, 4); fatigue (6, 11); and pain (3, 7).InterpretationBased on the selected QLQ-C30 scales, the MID may depend upon whether the patients' PS is improving or worsening, but our results are not definitive. The MID estimates for the specified scales can help clinicians and researchers evaluate the significance of changes in HRQOL and assess the value of a health care intervention or compare treatments. The estimates also can be useful in determining sample sizes in the design of future clinical trials.

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