This paper reports the psychometric testing of the Worthing Chemotherapy Questionnaire (WCQ). The WCQ is a patient self-report instrument to document side-effects of chemotherapy. Literature review of relevant studies shows that psychometric testing of similar instruments is rarely rigorous. Content validity for the WCQ was established in five ways: literature review, Delphi review among oncology staff, pre-pilot unstructured interviews, pilot study and amendment of the instrument and items for spontaneous reporting of problems on the questionnaire. A three-stage approach to construct validity was used. The hypothesis adopted was that as certain cytotoxic agents cause stomatitis, incidence and severity of stomatitis will decrease following cessation of treatment. Stage 1: factor analysis confirmed the presence of a sole factor, with an eigenvalue of 5.3, for mouth problems which explained 65.5% of the variance. Stage 2: the hypothesis was confirmed using research findings. Stage 3: the Wilcoxon test showed highly significant results for during and post chemotherapy stomatitis scores. Reliability of the questionnaire was assessed using the test-retest method. Weighted kappa was chosen as the test statistic. A median value of wk = 0.87 was obtained. The results indicate that the WCQ is a reliable and valid instrument.
Summary
This is a report of seven patients with jaundice due to extensive hepatic secondary deposits, who were treated with combination chemotherapy.
In six cases the jaundice was relieved and biochemical and liver function tests improved.
Three patients survived for 1 year or longer.
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