PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Harris, Carolyn S AU - Kober, Kord AU - Cooper, Bruce AU - Conley, Yvette P AU - Hammer, Marilyn J AU - Dhruva, Anand A AU - Cartwright, Frances AU - Paul, Steven AU - Levine, Jon AU - Miaskowski, Christine TI - Symptom clusters in oncology outpatients: stability and consistency across a cycle of chemotherapy AID - 10.1136/spcare-2022-003785 DP - 2023 Dec 01 TA - BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care PG - e1198--e1211 VI - 13 IP - e3 4099 - http://spcare.bmj.com/content/13/e3/e1198.short 4100 - http://spcare.bmj.com/content/13/e3/e1198.full SO - BMJ Support Palliat Care2023 Dec 01; 13 AB - Objectives Improved understanding of the stability and consistency of symptom clusters across time, symptom dimensions and cancer diagnoses will lead to refinements in symptom assessments and management, and provide direction for mechanistic studies. Study purposes were to describe the occurrence, severity and distress of 38 symptoms; evaluate the stability and consistency of symptom clusters across a cycle of chemotherapy, three symptom dimensions and four distinct cancer types; and identify common and distinct symptom clusters.Methods Oncology outpatients (n=1329) completed the Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale prior to their next cycle of chemotherapy (T1), 1 week after chemotherapy (T2) and 2 weeks after chemotherapy (T3). Symptom clusters were identified using exploratory factor analysis using unweighted least squares. GEOMIN rotated factor loadings with absolute values ≥0.40 were considered meaningful. Clusters were stable if they were identified across each time point and/or dimension. Clusters were consistent if the same two or three symptoms with the highest factor loadings were identified across each time point and/or dimension.Results Patients reported 13.9 (±7.2) symptoms at T1, 14.0 (±7.0) at T2 and 12.2 (±6.8) at T3. Psychological, weight gain, gastrointestinal and respiratory clusters were stable across time and dimensions. Only the psychological, weight gain and respiratory clusters were consistent across time and dimensions.Conclusion Given the stability of the psychological, weight gain and gastrointestinal clusters across cancer diagnoses, symptoms within these clusters need to be routinely assessed. However, respiratory and hormonal clusters are unique to specific cancer types and the symptoms within these clusters are variable.Data are available upon request.