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Patient-reported Outcome Measures for Facial Skin Cancer: A Systematic Review and Evaluation of Measurement Properties

This study provides a comprehensive assessment of the validity and quality of patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) used for facial skin cancer. It assesses the methodological quality and psychometric properties of PROMs and evaluates their relevance to the reconstructive aspect of patient care. The study recommends further validation and development of PROMs for aesthetic outcomes in facial skin cancer treatment.

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Patient-reported Outcome Measures for Facial Skin Cancer: A Systematic Review and Evaluation of Measurement Properties

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  1. Patient reported outcome measures for facial skin cancer: a systematic review and evaluation of the quality of their measurement properties Tom Dobbs, Harsh Samarendra, Sarah Hughes, Hayley Hutchings, Iain S Whitaker Welsh Centre for Burns and Plastics Swansea University Medical School Oxford University Medical School British Journal of Dermatology. DOI: 10.1111/bjd.17342

  2. Mr Tom Dobbs

  3. Introduction What is already known about this topic? Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) are important in both research and daily clinical practice. This is especially true in facial skin cancer, where both the condition and the resulting aesthetic outcome of treatment are important. PROMs for facial skin cancer exist, however their validity against the contemporary international consensus have yet to be reported. The relevance of these PROMs to patients’ views of treatment outcomes is yet to be investigated.

  4. Objectives • Identify PROMs that have been designed for and/or validated in patients with facial skin cancer • Assess the methodological quality of the included studies • Assess the psychometric properties of those identified PROMs • Make an assessment of the focus of each PROM on the reconstructive aspect of patient care

  5. Methods (1) • Systematic review to identify PROMs for facial skin cancer • MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsychINFO, Cochrane and CINAHL searched • Abstracts screened using inclusion and exclusion criteria by two reviewers

  6. Methods (2) • Methodological quality of included studies assessed using the COnsenus-based Standards for the Selection of Health Measurement INstruments (COSMIN) • Psychometric properties of included studies assessed using criteria developed by Terwee et al • Combination of these used to develop best evidence summary • Assessment of relevance to reconstruction of skin cancer also assessed

  7. Results (1) Fig. 1 – PRISMA flow-diagram • 24 studies on 11 PROMs included (Fig. 1)

  8. Results (2) Fig. 2 – Best evidence summary of results from COSMIN and Terwee et al assessment. OMERACT recommendation: instrument meets two or more required items and therefore has potential for use

  9. Results (3) • Patient Outcome of Surgery – Head/Neck (POS-H/N), Skin Cancer Index (SCI), Skin Cancer Quality of Life Impact Tool (SCQLIT) and Essers et al demonstrating the greatest level of validation (Fig. 2) • None scored well in terms of relevant questions to post-treatment reconstruction

  10. Discussion (1) • Identified PROMs had a variable degree of validation against current international best standards • Four show potential, with reasonably good validation already completed • A fifth (FACE-Q Skin Cancer module) has potential but at the time of systematic review very little had been published on it

  11. Discussion (2) • All showed little relevance in their questions to the aesthetic and functional aspects of reconstruction • This needs to be addressed and further validation performed before routine use of a PROM for facial skin cancer can be recommended

  12. ConclusionsWhat does this study add? • This systematic review provides a comprehensive assessment of the validity of PROMs used for facial skin cancer using current best practice assessment tools, helping clinicians and researchers to select the most appropriate PROM to use. • Each PROM is also assessed for relevance to the post-treatment aesthetic outcome, with a recommendation that further validated items are required to adequately assess this important area of skin cancer treatment.

  13. Call for correspondence • Why not join the debate on this article through our correspondence section? • Rapid responses should not exceed 350 words, four references and one figure • Further details can be found here

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