Background: The National Cancer Institute's Patient-Reported Outcomes Version of the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events, collected alongside the clinician-reported Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events, enables comparisons of patient and clinician reports on treatment toxicity. Methods: In a multisite study of women receiving chemotherapy for early-stage breast cancer, symptom reports were collected on the same day from patients and their clinicians for 17 symptoms; their data were not shared with each other. The proportions of moderate, severe, or very severe patient-reported symptom severity were compared with the proportions of clinician-rated grade 2, 3, or 4 toxicity. Patient-clinician agreement was assessed via κ ...
Understanding the potential profile of adverse events associated with cancer treatment is essential ...
Symptomatic adverse events (AEs) in cancer trials are currently reported by clinicians using the Nat...
The National Cancer Institute’s Patient-Reported Outcomes version of the Common Terminology Criteria...
Background: This study explores the incidence of patient-reported major toxicity—symptoms rated “mod...
Background: Monitoring adverse events during chemotherapy by clinicians is a standard practice but c...
Symptomatic adverse events (AEs) are monitored by clinicians as part of all US-based clinical trials...
The National Cancer Institute’s Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (NCI-CTCAE) reporting...
Background: To the authors' knowledge, it is unknown whether patient-reported symptom severity and s...
Background: In the current study, the authors investigated the incidence of moderate to severe chemo...
The National Cancer Institute (NCI) is developing a patient-reported version of its Common Terminolo...
Symptomatic adverse event (AE) monitoring is essential in cancer clinical trials to assess patient s...
Clinicians can miss up to half of patients’ symptomatic toxicities in cancer clinical trials and rou...
Purpose: It is not known whether chemotherapy-related symptom experiences differ between Black and W...
Background: Chemotherapeutic drugs are commonly associated with various harmful consequences which c...
Systematic capture of the patient perspective can inform the development of new cancer therapies. Pa...
Understanding the potential profile of adverse events associated with cancer treatment is essential ...
Symptomatic adverse events (AEs) in cancer trials are currently reported by clinicians using the Nat...
The National Cancer Institute’s Patient-Reported Outcomes version of the Common Terminology Criteria...
Background: This study explores the incidence of patient-reported major toxicity—symptoms rated “mod...
Background: Monitoring adverse events during chemotherapy by clinicians is a standard practice but c...
Symptomatic adverse events (AEs) are monitored by clinicians as part of all US-based clinical trials...
The National Cancer Institute’s Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (NCI-CTCAE) reporting...
Background: To the authors' knowledge, it is unknown whether patient-reported symptom severity and s...
Background: In the current study, the authors investigated the incidence of moderate to severe chemo...
The National Cancer Institute (NCI) is developing a patient-reported version of its Common Terminolo...
Symptomatic adverse event (AE) monitoring is essential in cancer clinical trials to assess patient s...
Clinicians can miss up to half of patients’ symptomatic toxicities in cancer clinical trials and rou...
Purpose: It is not known whether chemotherapy-related symptom experiences differ between Black and W...
Background: Chemotherapeutic drugs are commonly associated with various harmful consequences which c...
Systematic capture of the patient perspective can inform the development of new cancer therapies. Pa...
Understanding the potential profile of adverse events associated with cancer treatment is essential ...
Symptomatic adverse events (AEs) in cancer trials are currently reported by clinicians using the Nat...
The National Cancer Institute’s Patient-Reported Outcomes version of the Common Terminology Criteria...