- ICH GCP
- Registre américain des essais cliniques
- Essai clinique NCT03156244
Using PROMIS as Part of Routine Clinical Care for Racially Diverse Prostate and Bladder Cancer Patients
LCCC 1636: Using PROMIS as Part of Routine Clinical Care for Racially Diverse Prostate and Bladder Cancer Patients
Aperçu de l'étude
Statut
Les conditions
Description détaillée
Cancer treatments, including surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy, are often linked to acute and late side effects. Historically, these effects were assessed by physicians and scored using standardized scales such as the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE). Thorough and accurate assessment of symptoms facilitates timely and patient-centered symptom management.
Multiple studies have demonstrated that PROs more accurately capture patient symptoms than physician assessment. In a prospective trial, Falchook et al. investigated patient vs. physician report of symptoms in head and neck cancer patients undergoing radiotherapy (N=44). Patients and physicians separately completed weekly symptom assessments during treatment and once during follow-up. Patients tended to report more severe symptoms than physicians. For example, in week six, physicians rated 86% of patients' fatigue as non-existent or mild while 86% of patients rated their own fatigue as moderate to very severe. In a larger study conducted at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center of 163 lung cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy, Basch et al. similarly examined patient vs. physician report of symptoms over one year. Compared to patients, physicians reported less severe and lower rates of fatigue, nausea, and pain and higher functional status.
Findings from these prior studies are consistent with evidence from a recent systematic review, which concluded that PRO data were essential for the evaluation of symptoms in cancer survivors. Many researchers have hypothesized the reasons behind this discrepancy in physician/patient ratings of symptoms, including poor communication, inadequate physician time spent per patient, and patients' underreporting of symptoms to physicians. Thus, incorporation of PRO data into routine clinical care can facilitate better detection and management of cancer and treatment-related effects.
Therefore, the goal of this pilot study is to move PRO data collection from a purely research exercise into using this as a tool to improve care for cancer patients. This pilot study will assess the feasibility of collecting PRO data as part of clinical care, and assess its "value" from the patient and physician perspectives. The investigators will recruit 80 patients with prostate or bladder cancers from the UNC Genitourinary Oncology clinics (including Urology and Radiation Oncology). PRO data that is most relevant to this patient population will be collected, including: gastrointestinal, urinary, sexual function, anxiety/depression, and sleep.
Further, given longstanding racial disparities in symptom experiences (e.g., symptom assessment, severity, frequency) among cancer patients and limited evidence of effective strategies for mitigating such inequities, this pilot study will also examine Black-White differences in terms of the feasibility and perceived value of sharing of patient-reported data to improve communication and decision-making.
Type d'étude
Inscription (Réel)
Contacts et emplacements
Lieux d'étude
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North Carolina
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Chapel Hill, North Carolina, États-Unis, 27599
- Becky Green
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Critères de participation
Critère d'éligibilité
Âges éligibles pour étudier
Accepte les volontaires sains
Sexes éligibles pour l'étude
Méthode d'échantillonnage
Population étudiée
La description
Inclusion Criteria:
- 18 years or older
- Non-Hispanic Black and White patients with a known pathologic diagnosis of prostate or bladder cancer and intent to undergo treatment.
- Signed, IRB approved written informed consent.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Initiation of cancer-directed treatment
- Race/ethnicity other than Non-Hispanic Black or Non-Hispanic White
- Inability to read and speak English
- Inability to comply with study for any other reason than language
- Dementia, altered mental status, or any psychiatric condition that would prohibit the understanding or rendering of informed consent.
Plan d'étude
Comment l'étude est-elle conçue ?
Détails de conception
Cohortes et interventions
Groupe / Cohorte |
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Caucasian
This cohort will consist of 40 white patients who are receiving either radiation or surgery for treatment of their prostate or bladder cancer.
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African American
This cohort will consist of 40 African American patients who are receiving either radiation or surgery for treatment of their prostate or bladder cancer.
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Que mesure l'étude ?
Principaux critères de jugement
Mesure des résultats |
Description de la mesure |
Délai |
|---|---|---|
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Feasibility of PRO assessments in a clinical setting
Délai: 90 days post treatment
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The feasibility of incorporating PRO assessments into the clinical setting for 80 Black and White patients undergoing treatment for bladder and prostate cancer.
Feasibility is defined as at least 70% of study participants completing all three PRO assessments.
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90 days post treatment
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Mesures de résultats secondaires
Mesure des résultats |
Description de la mesure |
Délai |
|---|---|---|
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Feasibility of enrollment
Délai: baseline
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The feasibility of enrolling bladder and prostate cancer patients into PRO assessment for clinical care.
Feasibility of enrollment is defined as at least 37.56% of eligible patients who are approached about the study agree to enroll.
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baseline
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Preferred mode of questionnaire completion
Délai: baseline through 90 days post treatment
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The proportion of study participants who chose web vs. interactive voice response (IVR) as the preferred mode for PRO data collection.
It is hypothesized 50% of patients will chose the web.
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baseline through 90 days post treatment
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Feasibility by cohort
Délai: baseline through 90 days post treatment
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The rates of the feasibility of PRO assessment, the feasibility of enrollment, and preferred mode of PRO assessment in Black vs. White patients.
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baseline through 90 days post treatment
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Perceived value
Délai: baseline through 90 days post treatment
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Patterns and Black vs. White differences in the perceived value of PRO assessments from the patient's perspective using semi-structured interviews.
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baseline through 90 days post treatment
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Collaborateurs et enquêteurs
Les enquêteurs
- Chercheur principal: Ronald Chen, MD, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Publications et liens utiles
Dates d'enregistrement des études
Dates principales de l'étude
Début de l'étude (Réel)
Achèvement primaire (Réel)
Achèvement de l'étude (Réel)
Dates d'inscription aux études
Première soumission
Première soumission répondant aux critères de contrôle qualité
Première publication (Réel)
Mises à jour des dossiers d'étude
Dernière mise à jour publiée (Réel)
Dernière mise à jour soumise répondant aux critères de contrôle qualité
Dernière vérification
Plus d'information
Termes liés à cette étude
Mots clés
Termes MeSH pertinents supplémentaires
Autres numéros d'identification d'étude
- LCCC1636
Plan pour les données individuelles des participants (IPD)
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Description du régime IPD
Informations sur les médicaments et les dispositifs, documents d'étude
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