病人就诊电子评估(ePVA)© 作为头颈部癌症实时干预的临床支持工具的实用性。

IF 2.2 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES mHealth Pub Date : 2021-01-20 eCollection Date: 2021-01-01 DOI:10.21037/mhealth-19-250
Janet H Van Cleave, Mei R Fu, Antonia V Bennett, Catherine Concert, Ann Riccobene, Anh Tran, Allison Most, Maria Kamberi, Jacqueline Mojica, Justin Savitski, Elise Kusche, Mark S Persky, Zujun Li, Adam S Jacobson, Kenneth S Hu, Michael J Persky, Eva Liang, Patricia M Corby, Brian L Egleston
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:头颈部癌症(HNC)患者会经历痛苦、衰弱的症状和功能限制,这些症状和限制会中断癌症治疗,降低他们与健康相关的生活质量(HRQoL)。头颈部患者就诊电子评估(ePVA)是一种基于网络的移动医疗患者报告测量方法,可就 HNC 常见的 21 类症状和功能限制提出问题。本文介绍了ePVA作为临床支持工具的开发和实用性,用于对HNC患者报告的症状和功能限制进行实时干预:2018年1月至2019年8月期间,75名参与者参加了ePVA的临床实用性研究。在签署知情同意书后,参与者填写了ePVA和欧洲癌症研究和治疗组织(EORTC)生活质量问卷(QLQ)普通(C30)问卷v3.0(评分范围为0至100分,100分代表最佳HRQoL)。ePVA 的临床实用性是指 ePVA 的可靠性、与 HRQoL 的收敛有效性和可接受性(即 >70% 的合格参与者在两次或两次以上的就诊中完成 ePVA,且 >70% 的 ePVA 报告被提供者阅读)。与护理 HNC 患者的跨学科团队进行的正式焦点小组讨论为开发作为临床支持工具的 ePVA 提供了指导。整个研究采用了定性和定量方法。使用 SAS 9.4 和 STATA 计算了包括平均值和频率、皮尔逊相关系数和学生 t 检验在内的描述性统计:参与者主要为男性(71%)、白人(76%)、确诊为口咽癌或口腔癌的患者(53%)以及正在接受 HNC 治疗的患者(69%)。数据分析证明了 ePVA 的可靠性(α =0.85)、与 HRQoL 评分的融合有效性和可接受性。症状和功能限制最多的参与者的 HRQoL 明显较差(症状总和:r=-0.50,PC 结论:这项研究表明,ePVA 可能是一种有用的移动医疗工具,可作为临床支持工具,对 HNC 患者报告的症状和功能限制进行实时干预。研究结果支持未来的转化研究,以提高 ePVA 在现实环境中的实用性,从而进行早期干预,减轻 HNC 患者的症状负担,改善其生活质量。
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The usefulness of the Electronic Patient Visit Assessment (ePVA)© as a clinical support tool for real-time interventions in head and neck cancer.

Background: Patients with head and neck cancer (HNC) experience painful, debilitating symptoms and functional limitations that can interrupt cancer treatment, and decrease their health-related quality of life (HRQoL). The Electronic Patient Visit Assessment (ePVA) for head and neck is a web-based mHealth patient-reported measure that asks questions about 21 categories of symptoms and functional limitations common to HNC. This article presents the development and usefulness of the ePVA as a clinical support tool for real-time interventions for patient-reported symptoms and functional limitations in HNC.

Methods: Between January 2018 and August 2019, 75 participants were enrolled in a clinical usefulness study of the ePVA. Upon signing informed consent, participants completed the ePVA and the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) Quality of Life Questionnaire (QLQ) general (C30) questionnaire v3.0 (scores range from 0 to 100 with 100 representing best HRQoL). Clinical usefulness of the ePVA was defined as demonstration of reliability, convergent validity with HRQoL, and acceptability of the ePVA (i.e., >70% of eligible participants complete the ePVA at two or more visits and >70% of ePVA reports are read by providers). Formal focus group discussions with the interdisciplinary team that cared for patients with HNC guided the development of the ePVA as a clinical support tool. Qualitative and quantitative methods were used throughout the study. Descriptive statistics consisting of means and frequencies, Pearson correlation coefficient, and Student's t-tests were calculated using SAS 9.4 and STATA.

Results: The participants were primarily male (71%), White (76%), diagnosed with oropharyngeal or oral cavity cancers (53%), and undergoing treatment for HNC (69%). Data analyses supported the reliability (alpha =0.85), convergent validity with HRQoL scores, and acceptability of the ePVA. Participants with the highest number of symptoms and functional limitations reported significantly worse HRQoL (sum of symptoms: r=-0.50, P<0.0001; sum of function limitations: r=-0.56, P<0.0001). Ninety-two percent of participants (59 of 64) who had follow-up visits within the 6-month study period completed the ePVA at two or more visits and providers read 89% (169 of 189) of automated ePVA reports. The use of the ePVA as a clinical support tool for real-time interventions for symptoms and functional limitations reported by patients is described in a clinical exemplar.

Conclusions: This research indicates that the ePVA may be a useful mHealth tool as a clinical support tool for real-time interventions for patient-reported symptoms and functional limitations in HNC. The study findings support future translational research to enhance the usefulness of the ePVA in real world settings for early interventions that decrease symptom burden and improve the QoL of patients with HNC.

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