Development and Validation of a Simplified Financial Toxicity Screening Tool for Use in Clinical Practice

JCO Oncol Pract. 2025 Jan;21(1):12-19. doi: 10.1200/OP-24-00598. Epub 2025 Jan 10.

Abstract

Purpose: Cancer-related financial toxicity occurs frequently and is a key driver of inequities in access to care and disparities in treatment outcomes. Current practices to screen for financial toxicity are inconsistent because of the lack of a validated and clinically integrated screening tool. This analysis aimed to create and assess an abbreviated version of the validated Comprehensive Score for Financial Toxicity (COST) tool, a measure of financial toxicity used for research purposes, which could easily be added into often-lengthy clinical screening workflows.

Methods: At an urban comprehensive cancer center with suburban satellite locations, a financial toxicity screening quality improvement project was conducted from June 2022 to August 2023 as part of routine clinical care: 57,526 longitudinal COST surveys were completed by 38,249 patients with cancer. An iterative algorithm selected the items with highest correlation with the total score. Using a separate validation data set, positive and negative predictive values (PPV and NPV, respectively) of the abbreviated tool (two-item) were assessed against the full COST score, with varying risk thresholds.

Results: Inclusion of two COST questions (Q3: "I worry about the financial problems I will have in the future as a result of my illness or treatment"; Q6: "I am satisfied with my current financial situation") yielded a score that had a correlation of 0.922 with the full instrument score. For the two-item scale, PPV ranged from 74% to 91%, and NPV ranged from 91% to 98% when compared with the full COST tool.

Conclusion: This analysis of a large data set finds that a simplified COST tool has high predictive value when compared with the full validated measure. An abbreviated COST measure of two questions is suitable for implementation into clinical screening workflows.

MeSH terms

  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Neoplasms*
  • Surveys and Questionnaires