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. 2020 Feb 15;12(2):205–218. doi: 10.4251/wjgo.v12.i2.205

Table 5.

Summary of support for the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy/Gynecologic Oncology Group-Neurotoxicity scale items in patient concept elicitation data

Instrument content Content validity support from patient interviews Example quotations from patient concept elicitation interviews Recommendation
NTX1 I have numbness or tingling in my hands Strong “It felt like there was a coating of wax over my hands” (PT 031). “It’s like a dead feeling and you don’t really have like complete-like if you're trying to pick up something, like a dime or something, you might not realize that you have it or don’t have it” (PT 003). “Well, first it was my fingertips. And they were numb and tingly” (PT 006). Retain the item. Strong support in concept elicitation data, cognitive interview data, and extant literature.
NTX2 I have numbness or tingling in my feet Strong “Just I can’t feel (sometimes) I can’t feel like if my feet are…cold or hot, I don’t know, I just it’s just numb, you know” (PT 026). “The best way I can describe it is walking on rice with pieces of broken glass in it. Yeah, I guess that’s the best I way I can describe the tingling. It’s constant, yeah...Fuzzy maybe feeling. Needle, sharp needle pain, because it’s kind of a combination of those. So it’s like a needle” (PT 031). ““It’s mainly in my feet. I have tingling in my toes. A slight numbness that runs up past my ankles” (PT 011). Retain the item. Strong support in concept elicitation data, cognitive interview data, and extant literature.
NTX3 I feel discomfort in my hands Strong “I can't open them [fingers]. There's probably like I said maybe- I mean they're almost open but they can't go flat, and if I try it, it will hurt more…a dull ache” (PT 008). Retain the item. Strong support in concept elicitation data, cognitive interview data, and extant literature.
NTX4 I feel discomfort in my feet Strong “They just ache. All up and down, they ache, they hurt, it’s uncomfortable, it’s nagging…it hurts” (PT 018). “…...a tightness like you have a really, really tight shoe on. Like something really heavy is on your feet and you can’t get it off. It feels like an intense weight. Your foot is being smashed” (PT 019). “If you’re walking you feel like maybe there’s something in your shoe or like something, did you step on something? And you really didn’t. It’s just an odd feeling...even like barefoot it will sometimes feel like you stepped on a sock or something” (PT 003). Retain the item. Strong support in concept elicitation data, cognitive interview data, and extant literature.
NTX5 I have joint pain or muscle cramps Moderate “It’s overall hand fatigue, it’s joint pain. It’s almost like repetitive motion, like I find that if I was out in a tractor all day and just the act of spinning the steering wheel constantly as I went across the field and operating the levers and everything on the tractor, that I needed to get my compression gloves on to do some compensating for that. And then at the end of the day my hands are just really, really fatigued” (PT 013). Retain the item based on cognitive interviews and literature support as a severe symptom of oxaliplatin-induced neuropathy.
HI12 I feel weak all over Moderate "My feet and legs are always cold. And then I guess you could call weakness and I guess chronic pain in my feet and legs, lower legs” (P T 031). Retain the item based on cognitive interviews and literature support as a symptom of oxaliplatin-induced neuropathy.
NTX6 I have trouble hearing Weak -- Retain the item based on cognitive interviews and literature support as a severe symptom of oxaliplatin-induced neuropathy.
NTX7 I get a ringing or buzzing in my ears Weak “I had ringing in my ears, but…I haven’t noticed it in the past week. And the last oxaliplatin was June 19th, so I think it took about a month probably after oxaliplatin for the ringing in my ears to settle down” (PT 005). Retain the item based on cognitive interview and literature support as a severe symptom of oxaliplatin-induced neuropathy.
NTX8 I have trouble buttoning buttons Strong “As the button is concerned, I had a very hard time grasping them and getting them through the button holes. It’s a very frustrating and annoying task. I just kept on fumbling with them and not being able to properly grasp the buttons, and I would have to ask my wife to actually come in and button up my shirt” (PT 033). Retain the item. Strong support in concept elicitation data, cognitive interview data, and extant literature.
NTX9 I have trouble feeling the shape of small objects when they are in my hand Strong “It takes me longer to do a lot of things. Even like if I’m reaching in my pocket to get something and there’s multiple things in the pocket it’s more difficult to go by feel on what I’ve grabbed” (PT 035). Retain the item. Strong support in concept elicitation data, cognitive interview data, and extant literature.
An6 I have trouble walking Strong “I have to be hyper vigilant about stepping over sticks and watching my balance…There are times when I would say I trip over my own feet because I will step funny because of lack of sensation. So I have to be conscious of walking and making sure that I’m planting my feet squarely to avoid stumbling” (PT 013). Retain the item. Strong support in concept elicitation data, cognitive interview data, and extant literature.
NTX10 I have pain in my hands or feet when I am exposed to cold temperatures Strong “It’s just a…ultra-sensitivity to cold, anything, it was, it’s like anything colder than my body temperature would either cause like pain or I couldn’t hold, like in my hands, I wouldn’t be able to hold things...And then for my feet…if I go into cold water or if I’m outside in the cold and my feet seem to get cold faster first before anything else, so...the cold sensitivity would be like touching something extremely hot, like you…your body reacts to pull away, you know. And then for my feet, it’s actually painful when they get cold, when they’re exposed to cold” (PT 012). Retain the item. Strong support in concept elicitation data, cognitive interview data, and extant literature.
NTX11 I have difficulty breathing when I am exposed to cold temperatures Moderate “As the temperature of the air started to change, to breathe in was difficult-it became kind of painful even” (PT 006). “I would have to cover up my mouth and nose because if I breathed the cold air; it was like somebody was trying to strangle me. My throat would close up and it’s like somebody had little daggers or needles they were sticking in my throat. It’s a very horrible experience” (PT 033). Retain the item based on cognitive interviews and literature support as a symptom of oxaliplatin-induced neuropathy.