2018
DOI: 10.3747/co.25.4080
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Are Patient-Reported Outcomes of Physical Function a Valid Substitute for Objective Measurements?

Abstract: BackgroundPhysical function is important for defining treatment strategies in patients with cancer and can be estimated using patient-reported outcomes (pros). Although pros are subjective, physical activity and fitness can be tested objectively with adequate, but more labour-intensive methods that are rarely used in daily clinical practice. To determine whether pros for physical function (pro-pf) accurately predict physical function, we studied their interrelationships with objective measures of physical acti… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“… 77 There is mixed evidence of associations between PROs and objective measures of physical function in cancer—some studies reported strong associations, 78 , 79 whereas others reported modest 80 to no associations. 81 , 82 This may be in part because of the nature of the PROs that are focused on global well-being that do not capture functional independence or real-world behavior of individuals, although they are important to patients. This supports the idea that PROs may need to be complemented by objective measures to provide a holistic picture of physical function, with a low burden on patients.…”
Section: Existing Methods To Assess Physical Function In Cancer Cachexiamentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“… 77 There is mixed evidence of associations between PROs and objective measures of physical function in cancer—some studies reported strong associations, 78 , 79 whereas others reported modest 80 to no associations. 81 , 82 This may be in part because of the nature of the PROs that are focused on global well-being that do not capture functional independence or real-world behavior of individuals, although they are important to patients. This supports the idea that PROs may need to be complemented by objective measures to provide a holistic picture of physical function, with a low burden on patients.…”
Section: Existing Methods To Assess Physical Function In Cancer Cachexiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This supports the idea that PROs may need to be complemented by objective measures to provide a holistic picture of physical function, with a low burden on patients. 81 , 82 …”
Section: Existing Methods To Assess Physical Function In Cancer Cachexiamentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Associations of PROMs and digital measures have been mixed. While objective wearable data often demonstrate lower associations with PROM scores of purported similar concepts (sleep quality, scratching) than layman expectations would posit [42][43][44][45], other areas have found PROMs to be highly aligned with sensor-derived variables [46,47]. For instance, Bahej et al [47] used objective measures to forecast PROs and achieved accuracies of around 70-80% for predicting subjectively reported mobility.…”
Section: Apples and Pineapplesmentioning
confidence: 99%