| Literature DB >> 32641023 |
Barbara M Wollersheim1, Kristel M van Asselt2, Henk G van der Poel3, Henk C P M van Weert2, Michael Hauptmann1,4, Valesca P Retèl1, Neil K Aaronson1, Lonneke V van de Poll-Franse1,5,6, Annelies H Boekhout7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In its 2006 report, From cancer patient to cancer survivor: lost in transition, the U.S. Institute of Medicine raised the need for a more coordinated and comprehensive care model for cancer survivors. Given the ever increasing number of cancer survivors, in general, and prostate cancer survivors, in particular, there is a need for a more sustainable model of follow-up care. Currently, patients who have completed primary treatment for localized prostate cancer are often included in a specialist-based follow-up care program. General practitioners already play a key role in providing continuous and comprehensive health care. Studies in breast and colorectal cancer suggest that general practitioners could also consider to provide survivorship care in prostate cancer. However, empirical data are needed to determine whether follow-up care of localized prostate cancer survivors by the general practitioner is a feasible alternative.Entities:
Keywords: Follow-up; General practitioner; Primary care; Prostate cancer; Randomized controlled trial; Secondary care; Specialist; Survivorship
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32641023 PMCID: PMC7346492 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-020-07112-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Prostate cancer surveillance guideline [10, 42]
| Surveillance | Year 1 | Year 2–3 | Year 4–10 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Office visits | 3, 6, and 12 months | Every 6 months | Annually |
| PSA monitoring | 3, 6, and 12 months | Every 6 months | Annually |
| Physical examination | Only if indicated | Only if indicated | Only if indicated |
Fig. 1Study flow chart. First follow-up visit is ≤6 months post-treatment. T0 = measurement prior to randomization; T1 = measurement 12 months post-treatment, T2 = measurement 18 months post-treatment, T3 = measurement 24 months post-treatment. Abbreviations: GP = General Practitioner
Outcome measures
| Description of outcome | Assessment | Description of measure |
|---|---|---|
| Sociodemographic and clinical data | Sociodemographic data, disease and treatment characteristics will be abstracted from medical records or reported by the patient. | Patient reported: place of birth, marital status, educational level, employment, lifestyle factors (i.e. smoking, alcohol consumption, length and weight), and the self-administered comorbidity questionnaire [ |
| Medical records: birth-month and year, hospital where primary treatment took place, referred specialist, date of diagnosis, date and type of treatment, tumor characteristics (clinical and pathological stage). | ||
| Adherence to the prostate cancer surveillance guideline (Table | PSA measurements | Number of PSA measurements will be abstracted from medical records. |
| The time from a BCR to prostate cancer retreatment decision-making | PSA value and referrals | The time from any detectable PSA level (> 0.2 ng/mL after surgery, > 2.0 ng/mL over nadir after radiotherapy) to the decision of prostate cancer retreatment in the hospital. |
| The management of treatment-related side effects | Assessment of Patients’ Experience of Cancer Care (APECC) survey [ | 37 items, organized into 10 scales in the following six areas: access to care; interaction with physicians; interaction with other members of the health care team; discussion of health promotion; perceptions of coordination of care; and the management of treatment-related side effects. |
| Health-related quality of life | EORTC Quality of Life Questionnaire Core 30 (QLQ-C30) [ | 30 items, organized into 5 functional scales (physical, role, emotional, cognitive, social), 3 symptom scales (pain, fatigue, and emesis), 6 items (dyspnea, sleep disturbance, appetite loss, constipation, diarrhea, and financial impact), and an overall QL scale. |
| Prostate cancer-related quality of life | EORTC Prostate cancer specific module (PR25) [ | 25 items, organized into 5 scales (urinary symptoms, bowel symptoms, hormonal treatment-related symptoms, sexual activity, and sexual functioning) and one item (incontinence aid). |
| Prostate cancer-related anxiety | Memorial Anxiety Scale of Prostate Cancer (MAX-PC) [ | 18 items, organized into one scale consisting of 3 subscales (general prostate cancer anxiety, anxiety related to PSA levels in particular, and fear of recurrence). |
| Continuity of care | Nijmegen Continuity Questionnaire (NCQ) [ | 28 items, organized into one scale consisting of 3 subscales (personal continuity, care provider knows me and shows commitment, and team/cross-boundary continuity). |
| Cost-effectiveness | EuroQol 5-Dimension (EQ-5D-5L) [ | 5 items (dimensions) multi-attribute utility questionnaire that measures mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort and anxiety/depression in 5 levels. |
| Health care costs | Medical activities abstracted from the management systems of the hospitals and GP practices | |
| Indirect costs | Patient reported productivity losses [ | |
Abbreviations: PSA Prostate Specific Antigen, BCR Biochemical Recurrence, EORTC European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer, QL Quality of Life, GP General Practitioner