Establishing the Minimal Clinically Important Difference of the Brief Fatigue Inventory for Brain or CNS Cancer Patients Undergoing Radiotherapy
Heather J Gunn, Isabella Zaniletti, William G Breen, Todd Leavitt, Aaron Bogan, Anita Mahajan, Paul D Brown, Elizabeth Yan, Sujay A Vora, Kenneth W Merrell, Jonathan B Ashman, Jennifer L Peterson, James L Leenstra, Zachary C Wilson, Brady S Laughlin, Nadia N Laack, Todd A DeWeesAbstract
Background
Minimal clinically important differences (MCIDs) quantify clinical relevance of quality of life results at the individual patient and group level. The aim of this study was to estimate the MCID for the Brief Fatigue Inventory (BFI) and the Worst and Usual fatigue items in patients with brain or CNS cancer undergoing curative radiotherapy.
Methods
Data from a multi-site prospective registry was used. The MCID was calculated using distribution-based and anchor-based approaches. For the anchor-based approach, the fatigue item from the PROMIS-10 served as the anchor to determine if a patient improved, deteriorated, or had no change from baseline to end of treatment (EOT). We compared the unadjusted means on the BFI for the three groups to calculate the MCID. For the distribution-based approaches, we calculated the MCID as 0.5 SD of the scores and as 1.96 times the standard error of measurement.
Results
359 patients with brain or CNS tumors undergoing curative radiotherapy filled out the 9-item BFI at baseline and EOT. The MCID for the BFI was 1.33 (ranged from 0.99 to 1.70 across the approaches), and 1.51 (range 1.16 to 2.02) and 1.76 (range 1.38 to 2.14) for the Usual and Worst fatigue items, respectively.
Conclusions
This study provides the MCID ranges for the BFI and Worst and Usual fatigue items, which will allow clinical meaningful conclusions to be drawn from BFI scores. These results can be used to select optimal treatments for patients with brain or CNS cancer or to interpret BFI scores from clinical trials.