4.7 Article

Quality of Life in Low-Risk MDS: An Undervalued Endpoint

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 11, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm11195699

Keywords

myelodysplastic syndromes; quality of life

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This paper argues for the importance of paying attention to health-related quality of life as a study endpoint in lower-risk MDS patients. Currently, there are limited therapeutic options available for this population, with new treatments mainly being studied in clinical trials. However, data on health-related quality of life during phase III studies are not commonly published, undermining its significance as a treatment goal. The paper suggests that health-related quality of life should be the main treatment goal in this population.
The opinion I put forward in this paper is that attention must be paid to health-related quality of life as a study endpoint in lower-risk MDS patients. At the moment therapeutic options are limited in this population. New treatments are predominantly available in clinical studies. In announcing trial publications and during manuscript introductions, quality of life is widely valued as a treatment goal. However, data on health-related quality of life during phase III studies are not published in the original publications, thereby undermining the importance of quality of life as a study endpoint. What seems to be forgotten is that quality of life comprises more than a study endpoint. It is the highest good of lower-risk MDS patients and should also be acknowledged as a safety aspect. Current phase II trials with new medications do not collect data on health-related quality of life, a practice that I consider unethical. In this opinion I demonstrate the current attitude towards health-related quality of life in lower risk MDS patients among leading journals and trial sponsors with several recent examples. I also argue that health-related quality of life should be the main treatment goal in this population. In the event that we shift our focus towards health-related quality of life as the main treatment goal, new treatments could come to a field where gains in overall survival have been marginal over the years.

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