Development and Validation of the Korean Version of the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire for Patients with Non-muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer: EORTC QLQ-NMIBC24

Article information

Cancer Res Treat. 2018;50(1):40-49
Publication date (electronic) : 2017 March 10
doi : https://doi.org/10.4143/crt.2016.594
1Department of Urology, Eulji University Hospital, Eulji University School of Medicine, Daejeon, Korea
2Department of Family Medicine, Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul, Korea
3Department of Urology, Kyungpook National University School of Medicine, Daegu, Korea
4Department of Urology, Chonnam National University Medical School, Gwangju, Korea
5Department of Urology, Pusan National University Yangsan Hospital, Yangsan, Korea
6Department of Urology, Wonkwang University School of Medicine, Iksan, Korea
7Department of Urology, Dankook University College of Medicine, Cheonan, Korea
8Department of Urology, Yonsei University Wonju College of Medicine, Wonju, Korea
9Department of Urology, Konyang University College of Medicine, Daejeon, Korea
10Department of Urology, Chungbuk National University College of Medicine, Cheongju, Korea
Correspondence: Jinsung Park, MD, PhD Department of Urology, Eulji University Hospital, Eulji University School of Medicine, 95 Dunsanseo-ro, Seo-gu, Daejeon 35233, Korea Tel: 82-42-611-3533 Fax: 82-42-259-1111 E-mail: jspark.uro@gmail.com
*Jinsung Park and Dong Wook Shin contributed equally to this work.
aPresent address: Department of Family Medicine, Supportive Care Center, Samsung Medical Center, Seoul, Korea
Received 2016 December 17; Accepted 2017 February 15.

Abstract

Purpose

We aimed to evaluate psychometric properties of the Korean version of the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) QLQ-NMIBC24 when applied to Korean non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) patients.

Materials and Methods

A total of 249 patients who underwent curative transurethral resection of bladder tumor (TURBT) for primary or recurrent NMIBC were asked to complete the Korean version of EORTC QLQ-C30 and -NMIBC24 questionnaires three times (preoperative, post-TURBT 3 months and 6 months). Linguistic validation and psychometric evaluation of the questionnaire was conducted.

Results

Multitrait scaling analysis confirmed satisfactory construct validity in five scales except the malaise scale. Internal consistency was good (Cronbach’s alpha ≥ 0.70) for the five scales except the malaise scale at the all three time points. Known-group comparison analyses showed better quality-of-life (QOL) scores in patients with higher performance status as expected, and better sexual function in men than women (p < 0.05). Most of the scales had low correlations (< 0.40) with the scales in QLQ-C30 showing divergent validity, except for malaise scale which showed higher correlations (0.42 to 0.60). Responsiveness to change was consistent with clinical implications over time after TURBT.

Conclusion

The Korean version of the EORTC QLQ-NMIBC24 has good reliability and cross-cultural validity for measuring various QOL aspects that can be self-administered to Korean NMIBC patients undergoing TURBT.

Introduction

Bladder cancer (BC) is the second most common cancer of the genitourinary tract in Korea and worldwide [1,2]. Urothelial carcinomas represent more than 90% of BC and are classified into non-muscle invasive BC (NMIBC) and muscle invasive BC according to depth of invasion. Majority of patients with BC are diagnosed with NMIBC [3], and it is treated with transurethral resection of bladder tumor (TURBT) with/without intravesical treatment. However, despite complete removal of NMIBC by TURBT, significant proportions of patients undergo tumor recurrence ranging from 15% to 90% within 5 years [4-6]. In addition to frequent tumor recurrence, clinical practice (including regular cystoscopy follow-up and intravesical treatment) may be associated with various side effects and patient morbidity, which consequently result in decreased patient quality of life (QOL). Thus, reliable and valid measure of such patient QOL is becoming important assessment of clinical outcomes as the issues of disease-free and BC-specific survival and would form the basis for the research and development of better BC treatment methods [7].

To address such needs, the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) QOL group developed modules for BC in the 1990s, and Blazeby et al. [8] validated a module specific for NMIBC, EORTC QLQ-NMIBC24 questionnaire in 2014. This questionnaire is a self-administered, multidimensional instrument exploring QOL of NMIBC patients in six scales (urinary symptom, malaise, future worries, bloating and flatulence, sexual function, and male sexual problems) and five single items (intravesical treatment issues, sexual intimacy, risk of contaminating a partner, sexual enjoyment, and female sexual problems). However, its applicability in different countries except an original European study [8] has not been reported. In this study, we developed a Korean version of QLQ-NMIBC24 questionnaire, and evaluated its psychometric properties to determine if it is appropriate for evaluating the outcomes of Korean NMIBC patients.

Materials and Methods

1. Translation process and pilot study

Linguistic validation of the Korean version of the NMIBC24 module was performed according to a standard, multi-step process, as detailed in the EORTC translation manual [9]. Forward translation of the questionnaire from English into Korean was independently conducted by two translators (two MDs) who are fluent in both English and Korean. Reconciliation of the two versions was made at the first consensus meeting among the translators and two main investigators (J.P. and D.W.S.) with a good command of English, yielding a first consensus Korean version. Such reconciled version was then back translated by two independent translators (a PhD in psychology and an English teacher), bilingual in English and Korean, without referring original English questionnaire. A second consensus meeting was held between the translators and two main investigators (J.P. and D.W.S.), during which the original and two back-translated versions were compared and their discordances were debated. At this meeting, we decided that several questions needed slight modification due to linguistic reason and cultural background, and made a revision of the first consensus version.

With the second intermediary version of the Korean NMIBC24 module, a pilot test was performed between May 2014 and July 2014 by an urologist (J.P.) to assess whether the questionnaire was clearly understood by the patients through the face-to-face interviews with 10 male and four female patients with NMIBC. After confirming that no patient had difficulty in responding to the questionnaire and no patient was confused, the definitive version was finalized, and edited by the EORTC QOL group. Each step of linguistic validation was approved form the EORTC QOL group, and the final version of Korean NMIBC24 questionnaire is available online (http://groups.eortc.be/qol/).

2. Study subjects

Patients who underwent TURBT with curative intent for primary or recurrent bladder tumor were prospectively recruited from November 2014 and December 2015 at nine university hospitals, with follow-up data collected through July 2016. Inclusion criteria were patients who underwent TURBT for histologically confirmed NMIBC. Exclusion criteria were (1) muscle-invasive BC, (2) history of previous upper urinary tract cancer, (3) patients with prior or concurrent malignancies in other organs, and (4) patients who have difficulties in communicating with clinician. No age limit was imposed. Institutional Review Board of each participating center approved the study protocol, and all study subjects were fully informed about the purpose of the study and provided written consent for their participation.

3. Study design

At enrollment, patient’s sociodemographic and clinical data were collected through the questionnaires. The validated Korean version of EORTC QLQ-C30 [10] and the linguistically validated QLQ-NMIBC24 questionnaire was self-administered to patients at prespecified time points: before TURBT (time window of 14 days before TURBT, visit 1) and post-TURBT 3 months (±14 days, visit 2) and 6 months (±14 days, visit 3). Post-TURBT (visits 2 and 3) questionnaires were done before follow-up cystoscopy at approximately 30 minutes after local analgesics intramuscular injection. Karnofsky performance status (KPS) was also rated by the clinician at the pre-specified time points.

4. Statistical analysis

Rule of 10 per item (the subjects-to-variables ratio should be no lower than 10) was used to determine the minimum required sample size for the psychometric analysis, as suggested by Dr. Aaronson of the EORTC QOL group. Thus, 240 patients (for 24 items) were considered adequate for this study.

For statistical analysis, scale scores of QLQ-C30 and NMIBC24 modules were calculated according to established EORTC QOL questionnaire scoring guidelines [8,11]. The raw scores for each multi-item and single-item scale were linearly transformed to a scale of 0-100. If more than 50% of the responses were missing, scale scores were not calculated.

Multitrait scaling analysis was used to examine the construct validity of the EORTC QLQ-NMIBC24. Item-convergent validity was defined as a correlation of 0.40 or greater between an item and its own scale (corrected for overlap), and item-discriminate validity was defined by the correlation between an item and its hypothesized scale (corrected for overlap) higher than its correlation with any other scale. Reliability was evaluated with internal consistency tested by Cronbach’s alpha ≥ 0.70.

The validity of the QLQ-NMIBC24 was examined with three approaches. First, known-group comparisons were used to determine the ability of the questionnaire to discriminate between subgroups of patients differing in known clinical status. Known groups used for these comparisons were KPS scores (< 90 vs. 90 vs. 100) and sex (male vs. female), and analysis of co-variance (ANOVA) and Student’s t test was used to determine statistical significance, respectively. Second, divergent validity of the QLQ-NMIBC24 was assessed by evaluating the correlations between this cancer-specific module and the core questionnaire, the QLQ-C30. Third, the responsiveness to change over time was evaluated using the three sets of QLQ-NMIBC24 questionnaires (baseline, post-TURBT 3 and 6 months). Paired t tests for matched sample were used to determine the significance of change. All statistical analyses were performed using STATA ver. 14.0 (STATA Corp., Houston, TX) and p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Results

1. Patient characteristics

Between November 2014 and December 2015, 291 patients were screened. After excluding patients with exclusion criteria, 249 (mean age, 66.7 years; standard deviation, 13.0) were enrolled into the study. Baseline sociodemographic and clinical characteristics are shown in Table 1. Majority of patients (84.7%) were male, while primary and recurrent tumors were 68.3% and 31.7%, respectively. After TURBT, 37.4% of patients underwent intravesical treatment (bacillus Calmette-Guerin, 19.7%; chemotherapy, 17.7%). All 249 patients (100%) completed the first set of questionnaire; 172 (69.1%), the second; and 145 (58.2%), the third. At the second and third visit, main reason for not completing the questionnaires was administrative failure (57 and 66 cases, respectively), while other reasons included follow-up loss (nine and 20 cases, respectively), patient refusal (10 and 15 cases, respectively) and progression to muscle-invasive BC (one and three cases, respectively).

Baseline sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of 249 patients

2. Compliance

Missing was generally low for non-sex related scales (< 2%, except for 4.4% for intravesical treatment at first visits), sexual function (highest with 10.4% at first visit), and male sexual problem (highest with 9.0% at first visit) (Table 2). However, missing rates were as high as around 50% for sexual intimacy, risk of contaminating a partner scale, and sexual enjoyment scale, which are instructed to be answered by those who have been sexually active during the past 4 weeks, and female sexual problem scale. When limited to those who reported at least a little sexual activity (item 48) at the each time point, response rate was around 75% (Table 2).

Scale descriptive statistics

3. Multitrait scaling analysis

The scale descriptive statistics are shown in Table 2. Among all scales, male sexual problem showed highest mean score (33.3 to 37.4), and malaise (8.3 to 14.1) and bloating and flatulence symptom scales scores (9.1 to 13.6) showed lowest mean scores. At baseline, the intravesical treatment scales which is related to treatment side effects showed some floor effects as expected (around 60% reported no problems at all) and few ceiling effects were noted (< 2.5%).

Results from the multitrait scaling analyses are shown in Table 3. For all the five scales except for the malaise scale, most of the item-own scale correlations exceeded the 0.40 criterion at the all three time points. In addition, most items correlated higher with their own scale than with other scales at baseline and follow-up, suggesting its item discriminate validity. In the malaise scale, correlation was rather low (0.21 to 0.35) among each item and suggesting the heterogeneity of the items in the scale. Scaling error was generally low and not found in most scales, except for the malaise scale (13.6% to 50.0%) at all three time points and future worries scale at baseline (4.5%).

Scale description, multitrait scaling results, and reliability

Internal consistency was good (Cronbach’s alpha ≥ 0.70) for all the five scales except for the malaise scale. However, for the malaise scale, the alpha coefficients were < 0.70 level (0.26 to 0.44), suggesting heterogeneity of the items in the scale (Table 3).

4. Known-group comparisons

In analyses performed with KPS as the grouping variable, there were significant differences in urinary symptoms, malaise, sexual function, male sexual problems, and sexual intimacy at ≥ two time points of the three time points, and there was also marginally significant difference in intravesical treatment at the all three time points (Table 4). Most scales and items were similar between men and women, except that men reported significantly more problems with sexual function and sexual enjoyment than women at the all three time points (Table 4).

Known-group validity

5. Divergent validity

Most of the QLQ-NMIBC24 scales had low correlations (< 0.40) with the EORTC QLQ-C30 scales (Table 5), indicating that the scales of this module are not conceptually overlapping in contents with the QLQ-C30. Exception was malaise scale, which showed correlations > 0.40 with most scales in the QLQ-NMIBC24 and all scales in the QLQ-C30. The urinary symptoms scale was moderately associated with nausea and vomiting scale (0.43), while the future worries scale showed a moderate association with the emotional function (0.48) and fatigue scale (0.43). Bloating and flatulence scale in the module had a moderate association with emotional function (0.48), cognitive function (0.43), fatigue (0.49), and nausea and vomiting scale (0.55).

Divergent validity with EORTC QLQ-C30 scales at baseline

6. Responsiveness to change

Table 6 shows change in six scale scores and five single items before and after treatment. A significant improvement was noted in the urinary symptom scale (24.9 to 21.0 between visits 1 and 2, p=0.051, and 21.0 to 18.2 between visits 2 and 3, p=0.049). Future worries significantly declined between visits 1 and 2 (p=0.001), and the risk of contaminating a partner significantly decreased between visits 2 and 3 (p=0.026). In addition, malaise symptoms showed an improving tendency between visits 1 and 2 (p=0.070), while sexual function showed a decreasing tendency between visits 1 and 2 (p=0.068). In contrast, no difference was observed among visits in the other two scales (bloating and flatulence, male sexual problem) and five single items (intravesical treatment, sexual intimacy, sexual enjoyment, and female sexual problem).

Responsiveness to change

Discussion

The current results demonstrate that the Korean version of EORTC QLQ-NMIBC24 is a reliable and valid instrument for measuring various QOL aspects for Korean NMIBC patients. This is mainly attributable to the high discriminate validity and good psychometric properties of the original questionnaire [8] as well as to a rigorous linguistic approach, consisting of forward and backward translations, and consensus meetings between researchers and translators. To our knowledge, this is the first study that evaluated psychometric properties of the EORTC QLQ-NMIBC24 questionnaire in non-English country.

High response rate for non-sexual scales, sexual function scale, and male sexual problem scale indicate that items of the questionnaire are easy to understand and acceptable to Korean patients. Low response rate to sexual intimacy scale, risk of contaminating a partner scale, and sexual enjoyment scale reflects that many patients were not actively engaged in sexual activity. This could be largely explained by the old age of the BC patients but also reflect loss of sexual interest and fear of contaminating partner after the BC diagnosis and early survivorship period after treatment. It was difficult to determine the true missing rate for those three sexual items, because less than half of patients reported that they had been sexually active during the study period. If limited to patients who reported at least a little sexual activity (item 48) at the each time point, completion rate was around 75% (Table 2). Our finding is also consistent with the original European validation study [8], in which around half of patients reported at least a little sexual activity, and completion rates for the sexual scales and items was > 75% if limited to those who have any sexual activity. High missing rate of female sexual problem scale is in line with our previous experience with validation of Korean version of EORTC QLQ CX24 (cervical cancer) module [12], which revealed relatively low compliance with regard to sexuality-related scales (around 40% of missing rates).

We found satisfactory item-own scale correlations (corrected for overlap) in most items, and also found satisfactory internal consistencies for the five scales (except the malaise scale) with Cronbach’s alpha ranging from 0.82 to 0.94 (Table 2). Interestingly, we confirmed satisfactory internal consistency in the bloating and flatulence scale (alpha coefficients ranging from 0.84 to 0.92) at the all three time points, in contrast to the original study with alpha coefficients ranging from 0.49 to 0.62 [8]. However, for the malaise scale, the alpha coefficients were below the 0.70 level (0.26 to 0.44), suggesting heterogeneity of the items in the scale (Table 3). Similar to our finding, internal consistency of the malaise scale in the original European study was low (0.57 at visit 1, 0.58 at visit 2, and 0.64 at visit 3). We also observed suboptimal item discriminate validity for two items in the malaise scale (item 38 and 39). For example, the item on fever (item 38) correlated more highly with bloating and flatulence scale than with the feeling ill or unwell item (item 39) in its own scale. Item on feeling ill or unwell (item 39) also correlated more highly with other scales, such as urinary symptom, intravesical treatment, future worries, and bloating and flatulence. Very low mean score (floor effect) and non-specificity of the symptom in this scale might be the reason for this finding.

Results from known-group comparisons were satisfactory since they were in line with clinical implications. As expected, patients with different KPS had significantly different scores in most scales and items both before and after treatment. In addition, we confirmed similar scores in most scales and items except for better sexual function and sexual enjoyment in men than women, consistent with the original study [8].

Results from the divergent validity with EORTC QLQ-C30 indicate that the QOL issues evaluated by the QLQ-NMIBC24 are generally distinct from those assessed by the more general QLQ-C30, although some of scales, specifically the malaise scale, had correlations > 0.40 with the QLQ-C30. Thus, we believe that the Korean version of QLQ-NMIBC24 can be usefully administered to Korean BC patients as an adjunctive of core module, EORTC QLQ-C30 to evaluate their QOL.

We found a significant improvement between baseline and post-TURBT visits in the urinary symptoms and also found such tendency in the malaise symptoms. This finding may be because BC can cause various urinary symptoms [13] and urinary tract infection-like symptoms at diagnosis [14] but such symptoms generally improve after TURBT. However, urinary symptoms at post-TURBT visits (3 and 6 months) in UK patients of the original manuscript [8] did not differ from baseline, while malaise significantly deteriorated compared to baseline. We think that higher proportions of patients undergoing intravesical treatment, which was frequently associated with various symptoms including urinary symptoms (urinary frequency, urgency, dysuria, etc.) and malaiselike symptoms, in the original study (100% compared to 37.4% in our study population) might affect their findings, although further studies in another patient cohorts are needed to elucidate exact reasons of these inconsistent findings in urinary symptoms and malaise. Meanwhile, future worries significantly improved after treatment, reflecting improvement of well-known psychological distress after diagnosis of BC [15,16], consistent with an original study [8]. NMIBC patients are reported to have sexual dysfunction including sexual inactivity and fear about contaminating partner with treatment agents [17]. Interestingly, risk of contaminating a partner gradually improved over time (between visits 2 and 3), whereas sexual function showed a decreasing tendency after treatment. No difference was observed in other scales except aforementioned scales until 6 months, similar to an original study [8], in which most scales and items did not significantly change before and after treatment except for three scales (malaise, future worries, and bloating and flatulence).

We acknowledge that our study has potential limitations. Follow-up rate was not optimal due to administrative failure in three institutes (responsible for 74% and 63.5% of not completing the questionnaire at visits 2 and 3, respectively), follow-up loss and patient refusal, which was attributable to various reasons including outbreak of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome during about half of our study period (from May 2015 to study end). However, because response rate was high (> 95% for non-sexual scales) in patients given the questionnaire, this finding does not mean that the module is not valid and difficult to understand. Despite possible limitations, given that majority of BC patients are diagnosed with NMIBC and no NMIBC-specific QOL questionnaire exists in Korea, the Korean version of QLQ-NMIBC24 module would be a useful tool to evaluate patient-reported outcomes in patients with NMIBC in clinical routine practice and in the research setting.

Our results show that the Korean version of EORTC QLQ-NMIBC24 questionnaire, with its adequate levels of reliability and cross-cultural validity, is a useful instrument for measuring various QOL aspects that can be self-administered to Korean NMIBC patients. Further clinical studies in Korean settings would be useful to provide robust data on its psychometric properties.

Notes

Conflict of interest relevant to this article was not reported.

Acknowledgements

We thank the EORTC Quality of Life Group for their supervision during the whole process of the linguistic validation for the Korean version of EORTC QLQ-NMIBC24 module.

This study was supported by a National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) Grant funded by the Korean Government (MSIP) (No. 2016026824).

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Article information Continued

Table 1.

Baseline sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of 249 patients

Variable No. (%)
Age, mean±SD (yr) 66.7±13
Sex, male 211 (84.7)
Height, mean±SD (cm) 165±8.4
Weight, mean±SD (kg) 65.6±11.9
Recurrent 79 (31.7)
Tumor size > 3 cm 47 (18.9)
Multiple 147 (59)
Shape, papillary 228 (91.6)
Tumor stage
 Ta 155 (62.2)
 T1 47 (18.9)
 Tis only 5 (2.0)
 Ta with Tis 23 (9.2)
 T1 with Tis 19 (7.6)
Tumor grade
 PUNLMP 8 (3.2)
 Low 153 (61.4)
 High 88 (35.3)
Intravesical treatment after TURBT
 Immediate single instillation of chemotherapeutic agent 83 (33.3)
 Bacillus Calmette-Guerin 49 (19.7)
 Chemotherapy 44 (17.7)
Comorbidity
 Any 160 (64.3)
 Hypertension 113 (45.4)
 Diabetes 56 (22.5)
Smoking
 None 79 (31.7)
 Past 116 (46.6)
 Current 54 (21.7)
Marital status, married 198 (79.5)
Employment status, working 89 (33.3)

SD, standard deviation; PUNLMP, papillary urothelial neoplasm of low malignant potential; TURBT, transurethral resection of bladder tumor.

Table 2.

Scale descriptive statistics

Variable No. of observations Mean±SD Min Max Missing Floor Ceiling
Urinary symptom
 Visit 1 249 24.9±19.6 0.0 95.2 1 (0.4) 22 (8.9) 0
 Visit 2 172 21.0±18.3 0.0 95.2 2 (1.2) 23 (13.5) 0
 Visit 3 145 18.2±18.1 0.0 90.5 2 (1.4) 28 (19.6) 0
Malaise
 Visit 1 249 14.1±17.6 0.0 66.7 2 (0.8) 121 (49.0) 0
 Visit 2 172 8.7±14.2 0.0 66.7 2 (1.2) 110 (64.7) 0
 Visit 3 145 8.3±13.5 0.0 66.7 2 (1.4) 93 (65.0) 0
Intravesical treatment
 Visit 1 249 18.9±25.7 0.0 100.0 11 (4.4) 138 (58.0) 6 (2.5)
 Visit 2 172 14.6±23.5 0.0 100.0 3 (1.7) 112 (66.3) 4 (2.4)
 Visit 3 145 13.3±22.1 0.0 100.0 2 (1.4) 98 (68.5) 2 (1.4)
Future worries
 Visit 1 249 40.1±25.7 0.0 100.0 2 (0.8) 23 (9.3) 9 (3.6)
 Visit 2 172 31.5±23.3 0.0 100.0 2 (1.2) 28 (16.5) 4 (2.4)
 Visit 3 145 31.2±24.8 0.0 100.0 2 (1.4) 29 (20.3) 4 (2.8)
Bloating and flatulence
 Visit 1 249 13.6±22.2 0.0 100.0 1 (0.4) 160 (64.5) 3 (1.2)
 Visit 2 172 9.4±17.8 0.0 100.0 2 (1.2) 121 (71.2) 1 (0.6)
 Visit 3 145 9.1±18.2 0.0 100.0 2 (1.4) 103 (72) 2 (1.4)
Sexual function
 Visit 1 249 23.0±25.7 0.0 100.0 26 (10.4) 104 (46.6) 2 (0.9)
 Visit 2 172 18.9±23.8 0.0 100.0 3 (1.7) 86 (50.9) 4 (2.4)
 Visit 3 145 18.5±23.3 0.0 100.0 7 (4.8) 75 (54.3) 1 (0.7)
Male sexual problem
 Visit 1 211 37.4±34.9 0.0 100.0 19 (9) 53 (27.6) 30 (15.6)
 Visit 2 145 33.3±34.5 0.0 100.0 3 (2.1) 52 (36.6) 19 (13.4)
 Visit 3 121 36.6±38.4 0.0 100.0 8 (6.6) 43 (38.1) 23 (20.4)
Sexual intimacy
 Visit 1 249/101a) 17.6±25.7 0.0 100.0 126 (50.6)/22 (21.7)a) 75 (61.0) 4 (3.3)
 Visit 2 172/71a) 23.5±29.5 0.0 100.0 77 (44.8)/17 (23.9)a) 50 (52.6) 5 (5.3)
 Visit 3 145/69a) 22.1±29.6 0.0 100.0 80 (55.2)/15 (25.4)a) 37 (56.9) 3 (4.6)
Risk of contaminating a partner
 Visit 1 249/101a) 18.6±25.4 0.0 100.0 127 (51.0)/22 (21.7)a) 71 (58.2) 3 (2.5)
 Visit 2 172/71a) 23.4±31.2 0.0 100.0 78 (45.3)/18 (25.4)a) 51 (54.3) 8 (8.5)
 Visit 3 145/69a) 17.4±28.3 0.0 100.0 80 (55.2)/15 (25.4)a) 42 (64.6) 4 (6.2)
Sexual enjoyment
 Visit 1 249/101a) 38.0±29.8 0.0 100.0 127 (51.0)/23 (22.8)a) 31 (25.4) 10 (8.2)
 Visit 2 172/71a) 31.2±29.4 0.0 100.0 79 (45.9)/18 (25.4)a) 32 (34.4) 7 (7.5)
 Visit 3 145/69a) 33.8±29.2 0.0 100.0 80 (55.2)/15 (25.4)a) 20 (30.8) 4 (6.2)
Female sexual problem
 Visit 1 38/4a) 26.3±28.5 0.0 100.0 19 (50.0)/1 (25.0)a) 8 (42.1) 1 (5.3)
 Visit 2 27/2a) 25.0±35.5 0.0 100.0 11 (40.7)/1 (50.0)a) 9 (56.3) 2 (12.5)
 Visit 3 24/5a) 16.7±23.6 0.0 66.7 14 (58.3)/2 (40.0)a) 6 (60.0) 0

SD, standard deviation; Visit 1, baseline; Visit 2, post-treatment 3 months; Visit 3, post-treatment 6 months.

a)

Response for patients who are sexually active at each time point (response 2, 3, 4 to item 48).

Table 3.

Scale description, multitrait scaling results, and reliability

Variable No. of items Item-own scale correlation Item-other scale correlation Scaling error (%) Cronbach alpha
Urinary symptom
 Visit 1 7 0.41 to 0.73 –0.3 to 0.52 0 0.83
 Visit 2 0.38 to 0.67 –0.14 to 0.67 0 0.82
 Visit 3 0.59 to 0.70 –0.4 to 0.53 0 0.86
Malaise
 Visit 1 2 0.32 –0.22 to 0.47 7 (31.8) 0.44
 Visit 2 0.21 –0.11 to 0.47 11 (50.0) 0.26
 Visit 3 0.35 –0.21 to 0.5 3 (13.6) 0.37
Intravesical treatment
 Visit 1 1 NA –0.13 to 0.46 NA NA
 Visit 2 NA –0.06 to 0.47 NA NA
 Visit 3 NA –0.2 to 0.56 NA NA
Future worries
 Visit 1 4 0.57 to 0.81 –0.33 to 0.58 2 (4.5) 0.88
 Visit 2 0.6 to 0.87 –0.25 to 0.59 0 0.90
 Visit 3 0.64 to 0.90 –0.17 to 0.51 0 0.92
Bloating and flatulence
 Visit 1 2 0.85 –0.11 to 0.52 0 0.92
 Visit 2 0.73 –0.22 to 0.41 0 0.84
 Visit 3 0.77 –0.33 to 0.39 0 0.87
Sexual function
 Visit 1 2 0.76 –0.27 to 0.71 0 0.87
 Visit 2 0.84 –0.12 to 0.72 0 0.91
 Visit 3 0.78 –0.34 to 0.67 0 0.88
Male sexual problem
 Visit 1 2 0.76 –0.29 to 0.64 0 0.86
 Visit 2 0.82 –0.03 to 0.41 0 0.91
 Visit 3 0.90 –0.32 to 0.72 0 0.94
Sexual intimacy
 Visit 1 1 NA –0.11 to 0.37 NA NA
 Visit 2 NA 0.04 to 0.65 NA NA
 Visit 3 NA –0.19 to 0.74 NA NA
Risk of contaminating a partner
 Visit 1 1 NA 0.01 to 0.37 NA NA
 Visit 2 NA 0.06 to 0.86 NA NA
 Visit 3 NA 0.04 to 0.61 NA NA
Sexual enjoyment
 Visit 1 1 NA –0.27 to 0.72 NA NA
 Visit 2 NA –0.09 to 0.72 NA NA
 Visit 3 NA –0.2 to 0.71 NA NA
Female sexual problem
 Visit 1 1 NA –0.27 to 0.56 NA NA
 Visit 2 NA –0.09 to 0.86 NA NA
 Visit 3 NA –0.2 to 0.61 NA NA

Visit 1, baseline; Visit 2, post-treatment 3 months; Visit 3, post-treatment 6 months; NA, not available.

Table 4.

Known-group validity

Variable According to performance status
According to sex
Karnofsky 100 Karnofsky 90 Karnofsky < 90 p-value Male Female p-value
Urinary symptom
 Visit 1 18.5 23.2 38.1 < 0.001 25.2 23.6 0.641
 Visit 2 19.1 18.3 36.1 0.003 21.1 20.5 0.878
 Visit 3 14.6 17.7 29.1 0.014 19.1 13.5 0.083
Malaise
 Visit 1 11.5 8.6 21.6 0.005 13.4 18.0 0.140
 Visit 2 5.9 9.1 20.2 < 0.001 7.5 15.4 0.007
 Visit 3 5.3 9.0 14.7 0.022 7.7 11.1 0.262
Intravesical treatment
 Visit 1 15.9 15.8 29.4 0.079 17.8 25.0 0.122
 Visit 2 13.0 14.0 28.6 0.064 13.8 18.5 0.346
 Visit 3 10.5 13.3 23.5 0.087 13.2 13.9 0.884
Future worries
 Visit 1 37.2 34.4 47.5 0.151 38.3 50.0 0.009
 Visit 2 30.8 31.3 42.9 0.180 30.7 36.1 0.266
 Visit 3 29.8 30.0 40.2 0.289 30.5 35.1 0.407
Bloating and flatulence
 Visit 1 12.1 7.5 12.7 0.262 12.5 19.7 0.063
 Visit 2 8.0 6.1 16.7 0.107 7.9 17.3 0.012
 Visit 3 7.8 10.0 4.9 0.566 8.4 12.5 0.316
Sexual function
 Visit 1 23.0 25.2 6.9 0.034 25.4 7.8 < 0.001
 Visit 2 20.7 15.5 11.9 0.277 21.8 3.2 < 0.001
 Visit 3 23.1 15.7 NA < 0.001 20.7 7.2 0.011
Male sexual problem
 Visit 1 32.8 40.0 56.4 0.071 - - -
 Visit 2 32.9 29.8 60.0 0.046 - - -
 Visit 3 25.4 38.5 74.2 < 0.001 - - -
Sexual intimacy
 Visit 1 16.3 17.9 75.0 < 0.001 18.6 8.3 0.189
 Visit 2 22.7 18.3 60.0 0.011 24.8 11.1 0.187
 Visit 3 18.0 20.8 33.3 0.721 22.0 22.2 0.985
Risk of contaminating a partner
 Visit 1 18.3 18.8 16.7 0.987 19.7 8.3 0.141
 Visit 2 21.3 21.7 26.7 0.929 24.3 14.8 0.389
 Visit 3 12.6 22.9 NA 0.284 18.5 11.1 0.475
Sexual enjoyment
 Visit 1 37.9 41.9 16.7 0.296 40.9 11.1 0.001
 Visit 2 27.9 28.3 40.0 0.629 34.1 3.7 0.003
 Visit 3 36.9 33.3 NA 0.205 38.1 7.4 0.003
Female sexual problem
 Visit 1 30.3 16.7 NA 0.577 - - -
 Visit 2 38.1 NA NA 0.193 - - -
 Visit 3 20.0 22.2 NA 0.913 - - -

Visit 1, baseline; Visit 2, post-treatment 3 months; Visit 3, post-treatment 6 months; NA, not available.

Table 5.

Divergent validity with EORTC QLQ-C30 scales at baseline

Variable Urinary symptom Malaise Future worries Bloating and flatulence Sexual function Male sexual problem
Physical function –0.38 –0.52 –0.24 –0.32 0.25 –0.16
Role function –0.34 –0.55 –0.27 –0.35 0.14 –0.19
Emotional function –0.36 –0.52 –0.48 –0.48 0.04 0.02
Cognitive function –0.40 –0.46 –0.33 –0.43 0.08 –0.11
Social function –0.35 –0.42 –0.39 –0.31 0.12 –0.09
Fatigue 0.40 0.60 0.43 0.49 –0.13 0.03
Nausea and vomiting 0.43 0.56 0.35 0.55 0.07 0.19
Pain 0.40 0.50 0.20 0.31 –0.13 0.22

EORTC, European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer.

Table 6.

Responsiveness to change

Variable Visit 1 Visit 2 p-valuea) Visit 3 p-valueb)
Urinary symptom 24.9 21.0 0.051 18.2 0.049
Malaise 14.1 8.7 0.070 8.3 1.000
Intravesical treatment 18.9 14.6 0.107 13.3 0.893
Future worries 40.1 31.5 0.001 31.2 0.847
Bloating and flatulence 13.6 9.4 0.099 9.1 0.725
Sexual function 23.0 18.9 0.068 18.5 0.428
Male sexual problem 37.4 33.3 0.584 36.6 0.262
Sexual intimacy 17.6 23.5 0.439 22.1 0.666
Risk of contaminating a partner 18.6 23.4 1.000 17.4 0.026
Sexual enjoyment 38.0 31.2 0.118 33.8 0.709

Visit 1, baseline; Visit 2, post-treatment 3 months; Visit 3, post-treatment 6 months.

a)

Comparison between visit 1 and visit 2,

b)

Comparison between visit 2 and visit 3.