Keywords

Checklists, Child cancer treatments, Patient-/parent-report tools, TRSC-C

 

Authors

  1. Williams, Phoebe D. PhD, RN, FAAN
  2. Williams, Arthur R. PhD, MA (Econ), MPA
  3. Kelly, Katherine P. PhD, RN, CNS, CPON
  4. Dobos, Carol PhD, RN-C, CNAA
  5. Gieseking, Annie BSN, RN, CPON
  6. Connor, Renee MSN, RN, CPN, CPON
  7. Ridder, Lavonne MN, MA, ARNP, CPON
  8. Potter, Nancy MN, ARNP, CPON
  9. Del Favero, Deborah MSN, RN, CPN

Abstract

Background: Symptom monitoring and alleviation are basic to the care of children and adolescents with cancer. A symptom checklist helps facilitate this process.

 

Objectives: The primary objective of this study was to calibrate a child-friendly, clinically usable checklist capturing symptom occurrence and severity; a secondary objective was to examine age group differences: 5 to 11 years (n = 222) and 12 to 17 years (n = 163) and sex differences: males (54%) and females (46%), and correlate symptom severity, functional status, and quality of life.

 

Methods: Three hundred eighty-five children/adolescents at 5 university-affiliated outpatient oncology clinics: central, western, eastern, southeastern United States. Diagnoses were acute lymphoblastic leukemia (45%), solid tumors (14%), nervous system tumors (18%), and others (23%). Principal component factor analysis, confirmatory factor analysis, correlational statistics, t test, Wilcoxon test were performed.

 

Results: (a) Robust 30-item checklist, 7 factors; (b) 14 of 30 symptoms reported by at least 40% of patients. Top 5 are feeling sluggish (77%), nausea (72%), appetite loss (66%), irritable (61%), and vomiting (54%). (c) Sixteen of 30 symptoms reported at severity 2 or greater: "quite a bit." (d) Therapy-Related Symptom Checklist-Children (TRSC-C) scores are as follows: range, 0 to 89; mean, 25.14 (SD, 18.68). (e) Cronbach [alpha] = .9106. (f) Older children reported greater symptom severities: TRSC-C (t = 2.73, P = .003). (g) There were no sex differences on the TRSC-C total score. (h) Lansky correlations with TRSC-C (r = -0.32; P = .02); factors: nutrition related (r = -0.36; P = .05); oropharyngeal (r = -0.51; P = .0002); and respiratory (r = - 0.25; P = .06). (i) Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory correlation with TRSC-C (r = -0.68; P = .0001).

 

Conclusion: The new TRSC-C has good measurement properties and is ready for use in clinics and research.

 

Implications for Practice: Use of the TRSC-C is consistent with guidelines emphasizing self-report of patient symptoms, shared patient decision making, and improved communications among patients, clinicians, and significant others.