Journal of Patient-Reported Outcomes (Dec 2019)

BOMET-QoL-10 questionnaire for breast cancer patients with bone metastasis: the prospective MABOMET GEICAM study

  • A. Barnadas,
  • M. Muñoz,
  • M. Margelí,
  • J. I. Chacón,
  • J. Cassinello,
  • S. Antolin,
  • E. Adrover,
  • M. Ramos,
  • E. Carrasco,
  • M. A. Jimeno,
  • B. Ojeda,
  • X. González,
  • S. González,
  • M. Constenla,
  • J. Florián,
  • A. Miguel,
  • A. Llombart,
  • A. Lluch,
  • M. Ruiz-Borrego,
  • R. Colomer,
  • S. Del Barco,
  • On behalf of GEICAM, Spanish Breast Cancer Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s41687-019-0161-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background Bone metastasis (BM) is the most common site of disease in metastatic breast cancer (MBC) patients. BM impacts health-related quality of life (HRQoL). We tested prospectively the psychometric properties of the Bone Metastasis Quality of Life (BOMET-QoL-10) measure on MBC patients with BM. Methods Patients completed the BOMET-QoL-10 questionnaire, the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) for pain, and a self-perceived health status item at baseline and at follow-up visits. We performed psychometric tests and calculated the effect size of specific BM treatment on patients´ HRQoL. Results Almost 70% of the 172 patients reported symptoms, 23.3% experienced irruptive pain, and over half were receiving chemotherapy. BOMET-QoL-10 proved to be a quick assessment tool performing well in readability and completion time (about 10 min) with 0–1.2% of missing/invalid data. Although BOMET-QoL-10 scores remained fairly stable during study visits, differences were observed for patient subgroups (e.g., with or without skeletal-related events or adverse effects). Scores were significantly correlated with physician-reported patient status, patient-reported pain, symptoms, and perceived health status. BOMET-QoL-10 scores also varied prospectively according to changes in pain intensity. Conclusions BOMET-QoL-10 performed well as a brief, easy-to-administer, useful, and sensitive HRQoL measure for potential use for clinical practice with MBC patients. Trial registration NCT03847220. Retrospectively registered on clinicaltrials.gov (February the 20th 2019).

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