A prospective study to validate the functional assessment of cancer therapy (FACT) for epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitor (EGFRI)-induced dermatologic toxicities FACT-EGFRI 18 questionnaire: SWOG S1013 Journal Article


Authors: Wong, S. F.; Unger, J. M.; Wade, J. L. 3rd; Wagner, L. I.; Lacouture, M. E.; Humphries, K. C.; Moseley, A.; Arnold, K.; Velasco, M. R. Jr; Floyd, J. D.; Esparaz, B. T.; Barzi, A.; Lenz, H. J.; Koczywas, M.; Dakhil, S.; Burton, G. V.; Fisch, M. J.; Henry, N. L.; Hershman, D. L.; Moinpour, C. M.
Article Title: A prospective study to validate the functional assessment of cancer therapy (FACT) for epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitor (EGFRI)-induced dermatologic toxicities FACT-EGFRI 18 questionnaire: SWOG S1013
Abstract: Background: Papulopustular rash is a common class effect of epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitors (EGFRI) that can affect patients’ health-related quality of life and cause disruptions to treatment. SWOG S1013 (NCT01416688) is a multi-center study designed to validate the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy EGFRI 18 (FACT-EGFRI 18) using 7-items from the National Cancer Institute (NCI) Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) version 4.0 to assess EGFRI-induced skin-related toxicities and their impact on functional status. Methods: Patients with a diagnosis of colorectal or lung cancer to receive EGFRI therapies for at least 6 weeks were enrolled. Patient self-assessments using the FACT-EGFRI 18 were completed prior to undergoing CTCAE assessment by trained clinicians at baseline, weekly × 6, and then monthly × 3. The psychometric properties of the FACT-EGFRI 14 (skin toxicity items only) and 18 (plus 2 nail and 2 hair items) were established based on criterion validity, known groups validity, internal consistency reliability, and responsiveness to change. Results: Of the 146 registered patients, 124 were evaluable. High Cronbach’s alpha (> 0.70) for both FACT-EGFRI 14 and FACT-EGFRI 18 scores across assessment times were observed. Although agreement (i.e. criterion validity) between individual and summary scales of the FACT-EGFRI 18 for assessing skin toxicity was good, agreement with the clinician-reported CTCAE was only fair. The minimal important difference was determined to be 3 points. The results also demonstrated responsiveness to symptom change. Discussion: Based on the results of this multi-center validation study, the FACT-EGFRI 18 patient-reported outcome instrument provided data from the patient’s perspective yielding unique information as well as complementing clinician-rated CTCAE grades, especially for the symptoms of pain, pruritus, and paronychia. Conclusions: Good to excellent psychometric properties for the FACT-EGFRI 18 were demonstrated, supporting further use of this patient-reported outcomes measure. Additional validation with a more diverse group of patients should be conducted. © 2020, The Author(s).
Keywords: health-related quality of life; papulopustular rash; dermatologic toxicity; egfri; hrql; patient-reported outcome measure; fact-egfri 18
Journal Title: Journal of Patient-Reported Outcomes
Volume: 4
ISSN: 2509-8020
Publisher: SpringerOpen  
Date Published: 2020-07-08
Start Page: 54
Language: English
DOI: 10.1186/s41687-020-00220-x
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC7343679
PUBMED: 32642992
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 3 August 2020 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Mario E Lacouture
    457 Lacouture