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Pragmatic paradigm for patient-reported outcome measure selection in lymphoma clinical trials: a rapid review study

Por: Guo · J. D. · Hartzema · A. · Cohen · J. B. · Tunstall · N. · Gehchan · A.
Objectives

Lymphoma is a haematologic malignancy affecting cells of the immune system. With numerous treatment options available, clinicians and patients frequently face difficulty in selecting the most appropriate therapy. Patient-reported Outcome (PRO) offers valuable patients’ insight that may support treatment differentiation. A PRO measure (PROM) is a questionnaire or survey measuring a PRO. Despite many efforts to guide the selection of PROMs in clinical trials, choosing the appropriate ones remains a challenge. This study aims to develop a pragmatic paradigm for selecting PROMs in clinical trials involving adult patients with lymphoma through the collaboration and communication between clinical investigators involved in trials and Health Economics and Outcomes Research (HEOR) scientists specialised in research methodologies.

Design

A rapid review was conducted to identify existing PROMs for adult patients with lymphoma in clinical trials and guidelines supporting PROM selection.

Data sources

PubMed, Google Scholar and websites for regulatory and health technology assessment (HTA) bodies in eight countries of interest were searched from 2009 to July 2024.

Eligibility criteria

Publications with PROMs were identified for adult patients in lymphoma trials. The most relevant guidelines supporting the development of the pragmatic paradigm were selected.

Data extraction and synthesis

The initial search and data extraction were conducted by one author. All authors participated in an in-depth review process.

Results

We categorise 31 applicable PROMs for lymphoma into four distinct groups, streamlining the PROM selection process to facilitate effective communication among clinical investigators, HEOR scientists, patients and others. Additionally, a five-step pragmatic paradigm is developed for identifying appropriate PROM(s).

Conclusions

The pragmatic paradigm presents a practical approach for selecting PROM(s) in lymphoma clinical trials. An appropriate PROM should conceptually align with the treatment goals and be acceptable to regulatory and HTA bodies. Thus, lymphoma clinical trials can generate more patient-focused data, contributing to improving patients’ quality of life and advancing lymphoma care.

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