Gender Neutral
Type Module
Testing Phase III - in development
Principal investigator(s)
Lonneke van de Poll-Franse
IKNL
Eindhoven, Netherlands
, Neil Aaronson
The Netherlands Cancer Institute / The University of Amsterdam
Amsterdam, Netherlands

Project summary

In phase I of this questionnaire development project we interviewed 575 disease-free cancer survivors (breast, colorectal, prostate, bladder, gynecological, head and neck, lung, or testicular cancer, lymphoma, melanoma, or glioma) recruited from 14 countries to generate one generic and 11 site-specific issue lists. The resulting consolidated generic issue list consisted of 122 issues. Based on the results, we have developed a provisional survivorship core questionnaire (QLQ-SURV111) and three provisional site-specific survivorship modules for breast (BR-SURV45), colorectal (CR-SURV34) and prostate (PR-SURV30) cancer (Phase II). These questionnaires have been translated into 14 languages and have been pilot-tested in a sample of 400 survivors from a range of European countries and Australia, Brazil and India (phase IIIa), resulting in the QLQ-SURV100, BR-SURV40, CR-SURV33, and the PR-SURV19.
To meet the needs for a shorter version of the QLQ-SURV100 that is suitable for evaluating long-term health-related quality of life (HRQOL) outcomes in clinical trials, we have made a distinction between essential and optional scales of the QLQ-SURV100, based on the correspondence with the QLQ-C30 scales and their underlying construct. After, we have consulted patient experts, health care professionals, and HRQOL researchers, to judge whether the remaining scales indeed were non-essential. Based on the prioritizing of the scales we have moved the essential scales to the beginning of the questionnaire. Consecutively, we have pretested the updated QLQ-SURV100 (changed order and items updated in phase IIIa) in a group of 78 survivors.
Currently, we are at the start of the large scale international phase IV validation

Achievements

Obtaining ethical approval, translating the questionnaires and preparing the online platform CHES for data collection

Future plans

Data collection is expected to be completed in December 2023

The phase IV validation study is expected to be completed in December 2024

Go to Top