Longitudinal analysis of health-related quality of life in cancer clinical trials: methods and interpretation of results

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TitreLongitudinal analysis of health-related quality of life in cancer clinical trials: methods and interpretation of results
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2021
AuteursBascoul-Mollevi C, Barbieri A, Bourgier C, Conroy T, Chauffert B, Hebbar M, Jacot W, Juzyna B, de Forges H, Gourgou S, Bonnetain F, Touraine C, Anota A
JournalQUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH
Volume30
Pagination91-103
Date PublishedJAN
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN0962-9343
Mots-clésCancer, Clinical trial, Generalized linear mixed model, health-related quality of life, Longitudinal analysis, time to deterioration
Résumé

Purpose Health-related quality of life (HRQoL) is assessed by self-administered questionnaires throughout the care process. Classically, two longitudinal statistical approaches were mainly used to study HRQoL: linear mixed models (LMM) or time-to-event models for time to deterioration/time until definitive deterioration (TTD/TUDD). Recently, an alternative strategy based on generalized linear mixed models for categorical data has also been proposed: the longitudinal partial credit model (LPCM). The objective of this article is to evaluate these methods and to propose recommendations to standardize longitudinal analysis of HRQoL data in cancer clinical trials. Methods The three methods are first described and compared through statistical, methodological, and practical arguments, then applied on real HRQoL data from clinical cancer trials or published prospective databases. In total, seven French studies from a collaborating group were selected with longitudinal collection of QLQ-C30. Longitudinal analyses were performed with the three approaches using SAS, Stata and R software. Results We observed concordant results between LMM and LPCM. However, discordant results were observed when we considered the TTD/TUDD approach compared to the two previous methods. According to methodological and practical arguments discussed, the approaches seem to provide additional information and complementary interpretations. LMM and LPCM are the most powerful methods on simulated data, while the TTD/TUDD approach gives more clinically understandable results. Finally, for single-item scales, LPCM is more appropriate. Conclusion These results pledge for the recommendation to use of both the LMM and TTD/TUDD longitudinal methods, except for single-item scales, establishing them as the consensual methods for publications reporting HRQoL.

DOI10.1007/s11136-020-02605-3