| Literature DB >> 30915228 |
Jennifer Philip1,2,3,4, Anna Collins1, Brian Le3,4, Vijaya Sundararajan1,5, Caroline Brand6, Susan Hanson7, Jon Emery8, Peter Hudson9, Linda Mileshkin10, Soula Ganiatsas9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Current international consensus is that 'early' referral to palliative care services improves cancer patient and family carer outcomes; however, in practice, these referrals are not routine. Uncertainty about the 'best time' to refer has been highlighted as contributing to care variation. Previous work has identified clear disease-specific transition points in the cancer illness which heralded subsequent poor prognosis (less than 6 months) and which, we contest, represent times when palliative care should be routinely introduced as a standardised approach, if not already in place, to maximise patient and carer benefit. This protocol details a trial that will test the feasibility of a novel standardised outpatient model of early palliative care [Standardised Early Palliative Care (STEP Care)] for advanced cancer patients and their family carers, with referrals occurring at the defined disease-specific evidence-based transition points.The aims of this study are to (1) determine the feasibility of conducting a definitive phase 3 randomised trial, which evaluates effectiveness of STEP Care (compared to usual best practice cancer care) for patients with advanced breast or prostate cancer or high grade glioma; (2) examine preliminary efficacy of STEP Care on patient/family caregiver outcomes, including quality of life, mood, symptoms, illness understanding and overall survival; (3) document the impact of STEP Care on quality of end-of-life care; and (4) evaluate the timing of palliative care introduction according to patients, families and health care professionals.Entities:
Keywords: Family caregivers; Integrated care; Intervention; Palliative care; Quality of life; Trial; Unmet need
Year: 2019 PMID: 30915228 PMCID: PMC6417202 DOI: 10.1186/s40814-019-0424-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pilot Feasibility Stud ISSN: 2055-5784
Transition point definitions
| Prostate cancer | Presence of metastatic disease and multi-day hospital admission |
| Breast cancer | Presence of visceral metastatic disease (metastases involving organs other than bone only) and multi-day hospital admission |
| High grade glioma | Hospital presentation (inpatient or outpatient): first recurrence of primary HGG where pathological or clinical diagnosis is glioblastoma/WHO grade IV disease or first diagnosis of primary HGG and no cancer specific treatment being prescribed |
Key components of STEP Care intervention
| 1. Identification of patients for eligibility at standardised transitions in the illness course | |
| 2. Initial hospital based palliative care consultation, addressing: | |
| (a) Review of underlying disease management | |
| (b) Screening for symptom distress | |
| (c) Screening for psychological distress | |
| (d) Review of informal social supports | |
| (e) Review of formal community supports, including local community palliative care | |
| (f) Providing information | |
| (g) Advance care planning discussions | |
| (h) Involvement of family carer, including enquiry of concerns, needs for information | |
| 3. Regular follow-up, at minimum monthly for minimum of 3 months | |
| 4. Case conference with the general practitioner within 28 days, addressing | |
| (a) Current and anticipated problems | |
| (b) Recommended management and therapies | |
| (c) Designation of responsibility for different aspects of care |
Fig. 1Study schema
Study outcome measures examining efficacy of intervention
| Domain (instrument) | Details of instrument | Time |
|---|---|---|
| Patient outcomes | ||
| Quality of life | QUAL-E [ | Time 0 |
| Health-related quality of life and symptom impact | EORTC QLQ-C30 [ | |
| Mood | DASS-21 [ | |
| Performance status | Australian-modified Karnofsky Performance Status (AKPS) ( | |
| Illness understanding | Prompted via nurse-led diary [ | |
| Overall survival | Months | T 5 (Following patient death) |
| Family carer outcomes | ||
| Quality of Life | CQOL-C [ | Time 0 |
| Mood | DASS-21 [ | |
| Preparedness to care | PCS [ | |
| Satisfaction with care | FAMCARE [ | T 5 (+ 12 weeks following patient death) |
| Quality end-of-life indicators in last 30 days of life [ | ||
| Hospital and ICU days | Patient medical record hospital/ monthly nurse-led diary | Following patient death |
| Number of emergency-department visits | ||
| Chemotherapy use | ||
| Place of death | ||
| Cost-utility and resource allocation outcomes | ||
| Patient-reported, cost-utility weights, measured by a cancer specific multi-attribute utility index | QLU-C10D [ | Study completion |
| Quality-adjusted life years | QALYs | |
| Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio | Actual cost ($) per unit of change in each outcome/health state/QALY gained | |
Measures of study feasibility
| Domain | Measure | Unit of measure |
|---|---|---|
| Feasibility | ||
| Number of participants | Identified as eligible | Number |
| Consented to participate | Percentage | |
| Completion of study | Percentage | |
| Step care delivery | Number of initial STEP consultations completed within 14 days planned timeframe | Percentage within 14 days |
| Number of interactions per patient | Number consultations | |
| Time from enrolment to first step interaction | Days | |
| Completion of outcome measures | Percentage of missing data | |
| Fidelity of step delivery between recording and documented activities using NAT:PD-C [ | Percentage content correlation within random audit of 20% of consultations | |
| Acceptability of Step Care | ||
| To patients and carers | Number of withdrawals from STEP Care intervention | Percentage |
| Number of adverse events arising from STEP Care intervention | Percentage | |
| Qualitative interviews with STEP Care family carers following bereavement | Qualitative data | |
| Acceptability of Step Care to clinicians | ||
| To clinicians | NAT: PD-C documentation completion rate by participating STEP care physicians | Percentage of content recorded for consultations conducted |
| Focus group with STEP Care physicians regarding perspectives on STEP care content, timing and frequency of interaction | Qualitative data | |