| Literature DB >> 25257804 |
Anna Thit Johnsen1, Morten Aagaard Petersen, Christian Gluud, Jane Lindschou, Peter Fayers, Per Sjøgren, Lise Pedersen, Mette Asbjoern Neergaard, Tove Bahn Vejlgaard, Anette Damkier, Jan Bjoern Nielsen, Annette S Strömgren, Irene J Higginson, Mogens Groenvold.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Advanced cancer patients experience considerable symptoms, problems, and needs. Early referral of these patients to specialized palliative care (SPC) could offer improvements. The Danish Palliative Care Trial (DanPaCT) investigates whether patients with metastatic cancer will benefit from being referred to 'early SPC'. DanPaCT is a multicenter, parallel-group, superiority clinical trial with 1:1 randomization. The planned sample size was 300 patients. The primary data collection for DanPaCT is finished. To prevent outcome reporting bias, selective reporting, and data-driven results, we present a detailed statistical analysis plan (SAP) for DanPaCT here.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25257804 PMCID: PMC4190470 DOI: 10.1186/1745-6215-15-376
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Figure 1Time points in the Danish Palliative Care Trial (DanPaCT).
Descriptive variables and their definitions
| Variable | Definition | Assessed by/assessed from |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Sex | The Danish Civil Registration System (called CPR in Danish) which depict sex and age | |
| Age | The Danish Civil Registration System (called CPR in Danish) which depict sex and age | |
| Cancer | Project nurse | |
| Receiving treatment (yes/no) | Whether the patient is receiving active anti-neoplastic treatment at the time of randomization | Project nurse |
| Education | Questionnaire, self-assessment | |
| WHO performance score | Project nurse | |
| Time since diagnosed with cancer stage four | Assessment based on the TNM (tumor, node, metastasis) system. First time it is documented that the patient has stage four cancer. Staging is updated, so a patient diagnosed with stage two and developing distant metastases at a later time is considered as having stage four when the metastases are discovered | Doctors or students with at least a bachelor degree in medicine |
| Time since diagnosed with primary cancer | Project nurse | |
|
| ||
| Center | There are six centers included in the study | |
| Primary need | Each patient is randomized for one out of seven potential primary needs (please see article text) | Questionnaire, self-assessment |
| Use of health care services outside the hospital | Use of for example, psychologist, physiotherapist or other health care services outside the hospital in the eight-week intervention period | Questionnaire, self-assessment |
| Cross-over | Patients from the control group receiving at least one physical contact with specialized palliative care (SPC) within the study period | Students |
| Protocol violations | Patients from the intervention group | Students |
Description of the sensitivity analyses that will be made for the primary outcome
| Imputations | Adjusted | Area under the curve (AUC) | Intention-to-treat (ITT) principle | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Yes, as in the primary analysis | Adjusted for covariates (center, WHO performance status, time since the patient was diagnosed with metastases, treatment status, sex, age, diagnosis and education) that are associated with the primary outcome ( | Yes, as in the primary analysis | Modified ITT analysis as in the primary analysis. |
|
| No | Yes, as in the primary analysis | Yes, as in the primary analysis | Violated, no imputations for patients who did not respond to the questionnaire. Analysis may be biased |
|
| Yes, as in the primary analysis | Yes, as in the primary analysis | No. The three- and eight-week follow-ups are assessed individually | Modified ITT analysis as in the primary analysis |
|
| Yes, as in the primary analysis | Yes, as in the primary analysis | Yes, as in the primary analysis | Violated, excluding patients who did not receive the experimental intervention (defined as at least one contact to the SPC team). |
|
| Yes, as in the primary analysis | Yes, as in the primary analysis | Yes, as in the primary analysis | ITT analysis. Multiple imputations for patients who do not respond or die |