Publication

Development of the EORTC QLQ-CAX24, A Questionnaire for Cancer Patients With Cachexia

Journal Paper/Review - Nov 1, 2016

Units
PubMed
Doi

Citation
Wheelwright S, Johnson C, Tomaszewska I, Strasser F, Solheim T, Schmidt H, Pinto M, Nicolatou-Galitis O, Kaasa S, Hammerlid E, Bredart A, Balstad T, Fayers P, Fitzsimmons D, Darlington A, Hopkinson J. Development of the EORTC QLQ-CAX24, A Questionnaire for Cancer Patients With Cachexia. J Pain Symptom Manage 2016
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
J Pain Symptom Manage 2016
Publication Date
Nov 1, 2016
Issn Electronic
1873-6513
Brief description/objective

CONTEXT
Cachexia is commonly found in cancer patients and has profound consequences; yet there is only one questionnaire that examines the patient's perspective.

OBJECTIVE
To report a rigorously developed module for patient self-reported impact of cancer cachexia.

METHODS
Module development followed published guidelines. Patients from across the cancer cachexia trajectory were included. In Phase 1, health-related quality of life (HRQOL) issues were generated from a literature review and interviews with patients in four countries. The issues were revised based on patient and health care professional (HCP) input. In Phase 2, questionnaire items were formulated and translated into the languages required for Phase 3, the pilot phase, in which patients from eight countries scored the relevance and importance of each item, and provided qualitative feedback.

RESULTS
A total of 39 patients and 12 HCPs took part in Phase 1. The literature review produced 68 HRQOL issues, with 22 new issues arising from the patient interviews. After patient and HCP input, 44 issues were formulated into questionnaire items in Phase 2. One hundred ten patients took part in Phase 3. One item was reworded, and 20 items were deleted as a consequence of patient feedback.

CONCLUSIONS
The QLQ-CAX24 is a cancer cachexia-specific questionnaire, comprising 24 items, for HRQOL assessment in clinical trials and practice. It contains five multi-item scales (food aversion, eating and weight-loss worry, eating difficulties, loss of control, and physical decline) and four single items.