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Dive into the research topics where Anne Oberguggenberger is active.

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Featured researches published by Anne Oberguggenberger.


BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making | 2012

The Computer-based Health Evaluation Software (CHES): a software for electronic patient-reported outcome monitoring

Bernhard Holzner; Johannes M. Giesinger; Jakob Pinggera; Stefan Zugal; Felix Schöpf; Anne Oberguggenberger; Eva Gamper; August Zabernigg; Barbara Weber; Gerhard Rumpold

BackgroundPatient-reported Outcomes (PROs) capturing e.g., quality of life, fatigue, depression, medication side-effects or disease symptoms, have become important outcome parameters in medical research and daily clinical practice. Electronic PRO data capture (ePRO) with software packages to administer questionnaires, storing data, and presenting results has facilitated PRO assessment in hospital settings. Compared to conventional paper-pencil versions of PRO instruments, ePRO is more economical with regard to staff resources and time, and allows immediate presentation of results to the medical staff.The objective of our project was to develop software (CHES – Computer-based Health Evaluation System) for ePRO in hospital settings and at home with a special focus on the presentation of individual patient’s results.MethodsFollowing the Extreme Programming development approach architecture was not fixed up-front, but was done in close, continuous collaboration with software end users (medical staff, researchers and patients) to meet their specific demands. Developed features include sophisticated, longitudinal charts linking patients’ PRO data to clinical characteristics and to PRO scores from reference populations, a web-interface for questionnaire administration, and a tool for convenient creating and editing of questionnaires.ResultsBy 2012 CHES has been implemented at various institutions in Austria, Germany, Switzerland, and the UK and about 5000 patients participated in ePRO (with around 15000 assessments in total). Data entry is done by the patients themselves via tablet PCs with a study nurse or an intern approaching patients and supervising questionnaire completion.DiscussionDuring the last decade several software packages for ePRO have emerged for different purposes. Whereas commercial products are available primarily for ePRO in clinical trials, academic projects have focused on data collection and presentation in daily clinical practice and on extending cancer registries with PRO data. CHES includes several features facilitating the use of PRO data for individualized medical decision making. With its web-interface it allows ePRO also when patients are home. Thus, it provides complete monitoring of patients‘physical and psychosocial symptom burden.


Acta Oncologica | 2012

Taste alterations in breast and gynaecological cancer patients receiving chemotherapy: Prevalence, course of severity, and quality of life correlates

Eva-Maria Gamper; Johannes M. Giesinger; Anne Oberguggenberger; Georg Kemmler; Lisa M. Wintner; Klaus Gattringer; Barbara Sperner-Unterweger; Bernhard Holzner; August Zabernigg

Abstract Background. Taste alterations (TAs) are frequently reported by chemotherapy patients. However, research on this topic is very scarce. The etiologies of TAs are not fully known and prevalences may vary across tumour types and chemotherapy regimens. The aim of the present study was to longitudinally investigate TAs in patients with breast cancer or gynaecological cancers receiving chemotherapy, and to provide expected values for TAs for these patient populations. Patients and methods. One hundred and nine cancer patients (32.1% gynaecological cancer, 67.9% breast cancer) receiving chemotherapy at the Department for Internal Medicine of Kufstein County Hospital were consecutively included in the study. At each visit the Quality of Life Questionnaire-Core30 and a screening scale for TAs, consisting of two validated questions taken from the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer item bank was administered. Statistical analysis was performed using mixed-effect models. Results. The prevalence of TAs in breast cancer and gynaecological cancer patients receiving chemotherapy was high (76.1%). There were differences in the extent of TAs as well as in their time course across treatment groups. The lowest TAs were found in breast cancer and gynaecological cancer patients treated with gemcitabine. The highest TAs were found in breast cancer patients treated with epirubicin/docetaxel/capecitabine. The steepest increase of TAs was found in patients treated with epirubicin/docetaxel. Moreover, significant associations between TAs and appetite loss as well as fatigue were found. Conclusion. The results show that TAs are an issue in breast and gynaecological cancer patients receiving different chemotherapy regimens. There is a need for a more systematic investigation of TAs in chemotherapy patients in general as well as the need to address this issue in clinical practice.


BMC Cancer | 2012

Adherence evaluation of endocrine treatment in breast cancer: methodological aspects

Anne Oberguggenberger; Monika Sztankay; Beate Beer; Birthe Schubert; Verena Meraner; Herbert Oberacher; Georg Kemmler; Johannes M. Giesinger; Eva Gamper; Barbara Sperner-Unterweger; Christian Marth; Bernhard Holzner; Michael Hubalek

BackgroundCurrent studies on adherence to endocrine therapy in breast cancer patients suffer from methodological limitations due to a lack of well-validated methods for assessing adherence. There is no gold standard for measuring adherence. The aim of our study was to compare four different approaches for evaluating adherence to anastrozole therapy for breast cancer with regard to concordance between methods.MethodsOutpatients with early breast cancer treated with anastrozole completed the multi-method assessment of adherence. We implemented a self-report scale (the Simplified Medication Adherence Questionnaire), physician- ratings, refill records and determination of anastrozole serum concentration.ResultsComparison of the four approaches using Spearman rank correlation revealed poor concordance across all methods reflecting weak correlations of 0.2-0.4. Considering this data incomparability across methods, we still observed high adherence rates of 78%-98% across measures.ConclusionOur findings contribute to the growing body of knowledge on the impact that methodological aspects exert on the results of adherence measurement in breast cancer patients receiving endocrine treatment. Our findings suggest that the development and validation of instruments specific to patients receiving endocrine agents is imperative in order to arrive at a more accurate assessment and to subsequently obtain more precise estimates of adherence rates in this patient population.


Health and Quality of Life Outcomes | 2011

Cross-cultural development of an item list for computer-adaptive testing of fatigue in oncological patients

Johannes M. Giesinger; Morten Aa. Petersen; Mogens Groenvold; Neil K. Aaronson; Juan Ignacio Arraras; Thierry Conroy; Eva Gamper; Georg Kemmler; Madeleine King; Anne Oberguggenberger; Galina Velikova; Teresa Young; Bernhard Holzner

IntroductionWithin an ongoing project of the EORTC Quality of Life Group, we are developing computerized adaptive test (CAT) measures for the QLQ-C30 scales. These new CAT measures are conceptualised to reflect the same constructs as the QLQ-C30 scales. Accordingly, the Fatigue-CAT is intended to capture physical and general fatigue.MethodsThe EORTC approach to CAT development comprises four phases (literature search, operationalisation, pre-testing, and field testing). Phases I-III are described in detail in this paper. A literature search for fatigue items was performed in major medical databases. After refinement through several expert panels, the remaining items were used as the basis for adapting items and/or formulating new items fitting the EORTC item style. To obtain feedback from patients with cancer, these English items were translated into Danish, French, German, and Spanish and tested in the respective countries.ResultsBased on the literature search a list containing 588 items was generated. After a comprehensive item selection procedure focusing on content, redundancy, item clarity and item difficulty a list of 44 fatigue items was generated. Patient interviews (n = 52) resulted in 12 revisions of wording and translations.DiscussionThe item list developed in phases I-III will be further investigated within a field-testing phase (IV) to examine psychometric characteristics and to fit an item response theory model. The Fatigue CAT based on this item bank will provide scores that are backward-compatible to the original QLQ-C30 fatigue scale.


Breast Care | 2009

Towards the Implementation of Quality of Life Monitoring in Daily Clinical Routine: Methodological Issues and Clinical Implication

Johannes M. Giesinger; Georg Kemmler; Verena Meraner; Eva-Maria Gamper; Anne Oberguggenberger; Barbara Sperner-Unterweger; Bernhard Holzner

Quality of life (QOL) has become a widely used outcome parameter in the evaluation of treatment modalities in clinical oncology research. By now, many of the practical problems associated with measuring QOL in clinical practice can be overcome by the use of computer-based assessment methods. QOL assessment in oncology is dominated by two measurement systems, the FACT scales and the EORTC QLQ-C30 with its modules. The amount of human resources required to implement routine data collection has been reduced significantly by advanced computer technology allowing data collection in busy clinical practice. Monitoring of QOL can contribute to oncologic care by facilitating detection of physical and psychological problems and tracking the course of disease and treatment over time. Furthermore, the integration of screening for psychosocial problems into QOL monitoring contributes to the identification of patients who are in need of psychooncologic interventions. Computer-based QOL monitoring does not replace the direct physician-patient communication but enables to identify specific impairments and symptoms including psychological problems. Beyond clinical practice, QOL data can be used for research purposes and may help health care planners to determine those patient services that should be maintained or ones that should be developed.


BMC Cancer | 2014

Assessing quality of life on the day of chemotherapy administration underestimates patients’ true symptom burden

Johannes M. Giesinger; Lisa M Wintner; August Zabernigg; Eva-Maria Gamper; Anne Oberguggenberger; Monika Sztankay; Georg Kemmler; Bernhard Holzner

BackgroundIn chemotherapy trials quality of life (QOL) is assessed mostly at the days of chemotherapy administration (i.e. event-driven) during treatment and follows fixed time intervals in the aftercare phase (i.e. time-driven). Specific QOL impairments and treatment side-effects are known to be time dependent following different trajectories. Therefore, acute problems are likely to be missed if assessments are done infrequently or at inappropriate time points. Since the planning of supportive care interventions during chemotherapy depends on knowledge about symptom trajectories, such information may be of substantial importance to a clinician.MethodsCancer patients receiving chemotherapy at Kufstein County Hospital were assessed using an electronic version of the EORTC QLQ-C30 at the day of chemotherapy administration at the hospital. One and two weeks later assessments were repeated via the internet while patients were at home. Assessments at home and the hospital were conducted using the web-based software CHES. Data were analysed by means of linear mixed models.ResultsA sample of 54 chemotherapy outpatients participated in electronic QOL assessments at the hospital and at home. For 9 out of the 15 QOL domains of the EORTC QLQ-C30 patients reported increased burden one week after chemotherapy administration compared to the day of chemotherapy administration. Most pronounced differences were found for Fatigue, Constipation, and Appetite Loss.ConclusionsOur results indicate that patients experience most severe QOL impairments in the week following chemotherapy administration. This is a period that is usually not covered by QOL assessments in chemotherapy trials which may result in underestimation of true treatment burden. Our findings suggest to conduct QOL assessments not only event- or time-driven, but to rely on specific hypotheses on symptom and functioning trajectories.


BJUI | 2013

Influence of achieved paternity on quality of life in testicular cancer survivors.

Brigitte Stoehr; Lydia Schachtner; Renate Pichler; Bernhard Holzner; Johannes M. Giesinger; Anne Oberguggenberger; Nicolai Leonhartsberger; Wolfgang Horninger; Hannes Steiner

Whats known on the subject? and What does the study add?


Wiener Klinische Wochenschrift | 2012

Verwendung und Nutzen von Patient-Reported Outcomes in der onkologischen Behandlung: eine Übersicht

Lisa M. Wintner; Johannes M. Giesinger; Georg Kemmler; Monika Sztankay; Anne Oberguggenberger; Eva-Maria Gamper; Barbara Sperner-Unterweger; Bernhard Holzner

ZusammenfassungFür die Evaluation onkologischer Therapien gewinnen subjektive Parameter wie die Lebensqualität zunehmend an Bedeutung. Die Belastung des Patienten bspw. durch Schmerzen, Fatigue und soziale Krankheitsfolgen üben einen beträchtlichen Einfluss auf das Wohlergehen aus und können nur durch direkte Aussagen des Patienten selbst erfasst werden. Die routinemäßige Erhebung von Patient-Reported Outcomes (PROs) bietet mehrere Vorteile: die Identifikation von Beeinträchtigungen, Verbesserung der Arzt-Patienten-Kommunikation, umfangreichere Beurteilung des Behandlungserfolgs und die direkte Abstimmung von Interventionen auf die Bedürfnisse des Patienten. Für den breiten Einsatz in ambulanten und stationären Settings sind gut validierte Instrumente und adäquate Softwarelösungen verfügbar. Das Anwendungsspektrum von PROs aus der klinischen Routine ist umfangreich. Sie erlauben wissenschaftliche Analysen, tragen zur Qualitätssicherung bei und finden Verwendung im Health Technology Assessment.SummaryThe patient’s perspective evaluated by patient-reported outcomes (PROs) gains more and more importance, since treatment efficacy is no longer solely linked to clinical outcomes like cure and overall survival. Ailments like pain, fatigue and social isolation can only be assessed by patients’ direct expression without any interpretation made by medical staff. PROs facilitate the disclosure of quality of life issues and patients feel a stronger support due to improved communication. PROs offer many further advantages like saving of time, cost and staff, targeted intervention and sensitizing of clinicians. Also, internationally validated questionnaires are available and the development of electronic PROs eases data-collection, calculation and storage. PROs collected within clinical routine are versatile concerning their applicability: They can be used for scientific analyses, quality assurance, and health technology assessment.


Wiener Klinische Wochenschrift | 2012

[The benefits of using patient-reported outcomes in cancer treatment: an overview].

Lisa M. Wintner; Johannes M. Giesinger; Georg Kemmler; Monika Sztankay; Anne Oberguggenberger; Eva-Maria Gamper; Barbara Sperner-Unterweger; Bernhard Holzner

ZusammenfassungFür die Evaluation onkologischer Therapien gewinnen subjektive Parameter wie die Lebensqualität zunehmend an Bedeutung. Die Belastung des Patienten bspw. durch Schmerzen, Fatigue und soziale Krankheitsfolgen üben einen beträchtlichen Einfluss auf das Wohlergehen aus und können nur durch direkte Aussagen des Patienten selbst erfasst werden. Die routinemäßige Erhebung von Patient-Reported Outcomes (PROs) bietet mehrere Vorteile: die Identifikation von Beeinträchtigungen, Verbesserung der Arzt-Patienten-Kommunikation, umfangreichere Beurteilung des Behandlungserfolgs und die direkte Abstimmung von Interventionen auf die Bedürfnisse des Patienten. Für den breiten Einsatz in ambulanten und stationären Settings sind gut validierte Instrumente und adäquate Softwarelösungen verfügbar. Das Anwendungsspektrum von PROs aus der klinischen Routine ist umfangreich. Sie erlauben wissenschaftliche Analysen, tragen zur Qualitätssicherung bei und finden Verwendung im Health Technology Assessment.SummaryThe patient’s perspective evaluated by patient-reported outcomes (PROs) gains more and more importance, since treatment efficacy is no longer solely linked to clinical outcomes like cure and overall survival. Ailments like pain, fatigue and social isolation can only be assessed by patients’ direct expression without any interpretation made by medical staff. PROs facilitate the disclosure of quality of life issues and patients feel a stronger support due to improved communication. PROs offer many further advantages like saving of time, cost and staff, targeted intervention and sensitizing of clinicians. Also, internationally validated questionnaires are available and the development of electronic PROs eases data-collection, calculation and storage. PROs collected within clinical routine are versatile concerning their applicability: They can be used for scientific analyses, quality assurance, and health technology assessment.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2016

High prevalence of BRCA1 stop mutation c.4183C>T in the Tyrolean population: implications for genetic testing

Laura Pölsler; Heidi Fiegl; Katharina Wimmer; Willi Oberaigner; Albert Amberger; Pia Traunfellner; Raphael Johannes Morscher; Ingrid Weber; Christine Fauth; Annekatrin Wernstedt; Barbara Sperner-Unterweger; Anne Oberguggenberger; Michael Hubalek; Christian Marth; Johannes Zschocke

Screening for founder mutations in BRCA1 and BRCA2 has been discussed as a cost-effective testing strategy in certain populations. In this study, comprehensive BRCA1 and BRCA2 testing was performed in a routine diagnostic setting. The prevalence of the BRCA1 stop mutation c.4183C>T, p.(Gln1395Ter), was determined in unselected breast and ovarian cancer patients from different regions in the Tyrol. Cancer registry data were used to evaluate the impact of this mutation on regional cancer incidence. The mutation c.4183C>T was detected in 30.4% of hereditary BRCA1-associated breast and ovarian cancer patients in our cohort. It was also identified in 4.1% of unselected (26% of unselected triple negative) Tyrolean breast cancer patients and 6.8% of unselected ovarian cancer patients from the Lower Inn Valley (LIV) region. Cancer incidences showed a region-specific increase in age-stratified breast and ovarian cancer risk with standardized incidence ratios of 1.23 and 2.13, respectively. We, thus, report a Tyrolean BRCA1 founder mutation that correlates to a local increase in the breast and ovarian cancer risks. On the basis of its high prevalence, we suggest that targeted genetic analysis should be offered to all women with breast or ovarian cancer and ancestry from the LIV region.

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Bernhard Holzner

Innsbruck Medical University

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Michael Hubalek

Innsbruck Medical University

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Verena Meraner

Innsbruck Medical University

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Georg Kemmler

Innsbruck Medical University

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Beate Beer

Innsbruck Medical University

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Eva-Maria Gamper

Innsbruck Medical University

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Monika Sztankay

Innsbruck Medical University

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Herbert Oberacher

Innsbruck Medical University

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