BACKGROUND: Traditionally, within dose-finding clinical trials, treatment toxicity and tolerability are assessed by clinicians. Research has shown that clinician reporting may have inadequate inter-rater reliability, poor correlation with patient reported outcomes, and under capture the true toxicity burden. The introduction of patient-reported outcomes (PROs), where the patient can assess their own symptomatic adverse events or quality of life, has potential to complement current practice to aid dose optimisation. There are no international recommendations offering guidance for the inclusion of PROs in dose-finding trial design and analysis. Our review aimed to identify and describe current statistical methods and data visualisation techni...
Objectives: In our systematic review, we assessed past and current practice of patient-reported outc...
<div><p>Background</p><p>Evidence suggests there are inconsistencies in patient-reported outcome (PR...
Background Evidence suggests there are inconsistencies in patient-reported outcome (PRO) assessme...
BACKGROUND: Traditionally, within dose-finding clinical trials, treatment toxicity and tolerability ...
BACKGROUND: Patient-reported adverse events may be a useful adjunct for assessing a drug's tolerabil...
BACKGROUND: The paradigm of early phase dose-finding trials has evolved in recent years. Innovative ...
ABSTRACT Background Patient‐reported adverse events (AEs) may be a useful adjunct to clinician‐asses...
Methodological issues may limit the impact and application of patient-reported outcome (PRO) evidenc...
Patient-reported outcomes (PROs), such as symptoms, function, and other health-related quality-of-li...
Introduction: Patient-reported outcomes (PROs) are increasingly included within cancer clinical tria...
Introduction: Emerging evidence suggests that patient-reported outcome (PRO)-specific information ma...
Patient-reported outcomes (PROs), such as symptoms, function, and other health-related quality-of-li...
Patient-reported outcomes (PROs) are increasingly used in single-arm cancer studies. We reviewed 60 ...
Aim: The aim for this study is to investigate the methodological quality and potential impact on cli...
Purpose: Despite development of clinical value frameworks by national and international groups, th...
Objectives: In our systematic review, we assessed past and current practice of patient-reported outc...
<div><p>Background</p><p>Evidence suggests there are inconsistencies in patient-reported outcome (PR...
Background Evidence suggests there are inconsistencies in patient-reported outcome (PRO) assessme...
BACKGROUND: Traditionally, within dose-finding clinical trials, treatment toxicity and tolerability ...
BACKGROUND: Patient-reported adverse events may be a useful adjunct for assessing a drug's tolerabil...
BACKGROUND: The paradigm of early phase dose-finding trials has evolved in recent years. Innovative ...
ABSTRACT Background Patient‐reported adverse events (AEs) may be a useful adjunct to clinician‐asses...
Methodological issues may limit the impact and application of patient-reported outcome (PRO) evidenc...
Patient-reported outcomes (PROs), such as symptoms, function, and other health-related quality-of-li...
Introduction: Patient-reported outcomes (PROs) are increasingly included within cancer clinical tria...
Introduction: Emerging evidence suggests that patient-reported outcome (PRO)-specific information ma...
Patient-reported outcomes (PROs), such as symptoms, function, and other health-related quality-of-li...
Patient-reported outcomes (PROs) are increasingly used in single-arm cancer studies. We reviewed 60 ...
Aim: The aim for this study is to investigate the methodological quality and potential impact on cli...
Purpose: Despite development of clinical value frameworks by national and international groups, th...
Objectives: In our systematic review, we assessed past and current practice of patient-reported outc...
<div><p>Background</p><p>Evidence suggests there are inconsistencies in patient-reported outcome (PR...
Background Evidence suggests there are inconsistencies in patient-reported outcome (PRO) assessme...