Quality of life measures in breast cancer treatment likely to be most useful for clinical decision making in trials, according to a study.
![Quality of Life - Basic Measure in Breast Cancer Clinical Trials
Quality of Life - Basic Measure in Breast Cancer Clinical Trials](https://images.medindia.net/health-images/1200_1000/Mammogram.jpg)
To determine how quality of life measures are used in clinical trials, Julie Lemieux, M.D., of the Université Laval in Québec, Canada, and colleagues, conducted a literature search for articles that reported a randomized clinical trial of breast cancer treatment in which quality of life was an endpoint.
Their review included 190 randomized clinical trials—103 on biomedical interventions, and 87 on non-biomedical interventions, such as psychosocial interventions like the effect of group therapy on patient outcomes.
The authors found that QOL measures were most useful for clinical decisions in trials using non-biomedical interventions.
They also found that quality of life measurements should be included as a secondary endpoint in adjuvant therapy trials only when the medical outcome is expected to be about the same, or if the study focuses on a vulnerable population such as the elderly; or tests a new intervention for which quality of life information needs to be obtained. They should also be included in metastatic breast cancer trials when a minimal survival difference is expected; or treatments have substantial differences in toxicity.
They also write that when QOL is not the primary endpoint of a trial, "QOL results should ideally appear in a companion article published at the same time as the traditional medical outcomes article so that a full view of the risks and benefits of the intervention can be presented at the same time to clinicians."
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Ganz also writes, "Inclusion of well-validated measures of relevant symptoms should be a high priority for assessing the burden of breast cancer treatments, whether in survivors of breast cancer or in women with advanced disease receiving palliative care."
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