| Literature DB >> 35420331 |
Chanel Kwok1,2, Charlena Degen2, Narges Moradi3, Dawn Stacey4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Patients receiving cancer treatments experience many treatment-related symptoms. Telehealth is increasingly being used to support symptom management. The overall aim was to determine the effectiveness of nurse-led telehealth symptom management interventions for patients with cancer receiving systemic or radiation therapy compared to usual care on health service use, quality of life, and symptom severity.Entities:
Keywords: Chemotherapy; Nurses; Oncology; Radiation therapy; Symptom management; Telehealth
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35420331 PMCID: PMC9008678 DOI: 10.1007/s00520-022-07052-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Support Care Cancer ISSN: 0941-4355 Impact factor: 3.359
Fig. 1Risk of bias graph: review authors’ judgements about each risk of bias item presented as percentages across all included randomized controlled trials
Fig. 2Risk of bias summary: review authors’ judgements about each risk of bias item for each included randomized control trial
Fig. 3Study flow diagram
Characteristics of included studies
| Study | Participants | Intervention | Outcomes of interest |
|---|---|---|---|
Bouleftour 2021 [ RCT, France | 184 adults with solid or hematologic malignancy initiating oral chemotherapy • Intervention: • Control: | Pre-scheduled nurse-led telephone calls | Hospitalizations, QOL, symptom severity |
Cirillo 2020 [ RCT, Italy | 432 adults with any cancer initiating oral chemotherapy • Intervention: • Control: | Pre-scheduled nurse-led telephone calls | (Unscheduled and avoidable) clinic visits and ED visits*, symptom severity |
Lai 2019 [ RCT, Hong Kong | 120 females with stage I to III breast cancer starting chemotherapy • Intervention: • Control: | Pre-scheduled nurse-led telephone calls | QOL*, symptom severity |
Traeger 2015 [ RCT, USA | 120 adults with non-metastatic breast, colorectal, or lung cancer starting chemotherapy • Intervention: • Control: | Pre-scheduled NP-led telephone calls | Symptom severity* |
Hintistan 2017 [ Before-after study, Turkey | 80 adults with stage I to III lung cancer on chemotherapy • Intervention: • Control: | Pre-scheduled nurse-led telephone calls | QOL, symptom severity* |
Basch 2016 [ RCT, USA | 539 adults with metastatic breast, genitourinary, gynecologic, or lung cancer on chemotherapy • Intervention: • Control: | Symptom reporting via web-based interface | ED visits, hospitalizations, QOL* |
Kornblith 2006 [ RCT, USA | 189 adults with advanced stage breast, colon, or prostate cancer on treatment • Intervention: • Control: | Pre-scheduled telephone calls with non-nurse trained monitors | QOL, symptom severity* |
Mooney 2017 [ RCT, USA | 358 adults with any cancer starting chemotherapy • Intervention: • Control: | Symptom reporting via telephone voice reporting system | Symptom severity* |
Yount 2014 [ RCT, USA | 253 adults with stage III or IV lung cancer on chemotherapy • Intervention: • Control: | Symptom reporting via telephone keypad system | Unscheduled clinic visits, ED visits, hospitalizations, QOL, symptom severity |
Jibb 2017 [ Before-after study, Canada | 40 adolescents diagnosed with cancer having pain • Mean (SD) age 14.2 (1.7) years, female 17 (43%) | Symptom reporting via web-based smartphone application | QOL, symptom severity |
RCT randomized control trial, IQR interquartile range, QOL quality of life, ED emergency department
*Primary outcome
Characteristics of telehealth interventions
| Scheduled nurse-initiated telehealth interventions | |||||
Bouleftour 2021[ RCT, France | Cirillo 2020[ RCT, Italy | Lai 2019[ RCT, Hong Kong | Traeger 2015[ RCT, USA | Hintistan 2017[ CBA, Turkey | |
| Intervention of interest | Pre-scheduled nurse telephone calls | Pre-scheduled nurse telephone calls | Pre-scheduled nurse telephone calls | Pre-scheduled NP telephone calls | Pre-scheduled nurse researcher telephone calls |
| Intervention description | Aim was to give management strategies and support patients to better manage potential toxicities | Aim was to increase patients’ awareness about oral drug intake, cycle duration, toxicity, management of side effects Daily diary: calendar to check daily pill consumption and self-report specific toxicity | Pre-chemotherapy nurse consultation and telephone follow-ups during chemotherapy | Proactive calls for guidance and support during the first 2 chemotherapy cycles | Calls guided by the Nurse Care Guide that included suggestions for relief of common symptoms of lung cancer due to chemotherapy |
| Who provided the intervention | 4 trained nurses, following a standard operating procedure | Trained nurse staff. Reference physician was always available if needed | 3 experienced nurses (worked in oncology for 10 to 17 years) | The participant’s NP | 4 nurse researchers with lung cancer-specific training |
| Telehealth intervention: when and how much | Call weeks: 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22, 24 | Calls planned on day 7 and day 14 of the 1st cycle and day 14 of 2nd cycle. If treatment discontinued and side effect ≥ grade 2, a referent physician was informed | 3 calls consisting of assessment, triage, care delivery, and evaluation | Calls 1 to 3 days and 4 to 6 days post 1st and 2nd cycle. After each call, the NP documented assessment and plan of care | Calls within a week after each chemotherapy session to assess and advise participant symptoms. If symptoms not improved or new concerns, these would be reviewed at later follow-up |
| Usual care comparator | 5 in-person medical consultations | At medical visit, physicians gave patients information and written material about drugs and the treatment plan | Brief education session before chemotherapy, care on the days of drug administration, and access to a patient-initiated hotline service during chemotherapy | Medical visit on the first day of each chemotherapy cycle and then call the clinic as needed with symptom management questions | Nurses Care Guide |
| Tailoring | Not reported | Patients monitored for the first two cycles regardless of the treatment schedule | Tailored to 4-cycle chemotherapy or 6-cycle chemotherapy | Not reported | Participants were encouraged to call nurse researchers as needed |
| Reactive patient-initiated telehealth interventions | |||||
Basch 2016[ RCT, USA | Kornblith 2006[ RCT, USA | Mooney 2017[ RCT, USA | Yount 2014[ RCT, USA | Jibb 2017[ CBA, Canada | |
| Intervention of interest | Symptom reporting via web-based interface | Pre-scheduled telephone calls with trained monitors | Symptom reporting via telephone voice reporting system | Symptom reporting via telephone keypad system | Symptom reporting via web-based smartphone application |
| Intervention description | Self-reporting conducted via STAR (Symptom Tracking and Reporting) web-based interface of 12 symptoms (0–4 scale). Completed reports remotely and at medical oncology/infusion sites via either wireless touchscreen tablet computers or freestanding computer kiosks. Triggered e-mail alerts for nurse to contact patient if symptoms worsened by ≥ 2 points or were ≥ grade 3 | Telephone calls from centralized, trained monitors. If patients scored above cutoff levels, monitor informed oncology nurse at treating institution within 24 h, who then contacted patient and made treatment recommendations Education materials: | Patients reported severity of 11 symptoms using an automated monitoring Symptom Care at Home (SCH) system. Received automated self-management coaching tailored to reported symptom prevalence and severity and NP telephone follow-up for poorly controlled symptoms | Telephone-based interactive voice response technology symptom monitoring system including 13-item symptom survey (FACT Lung Symptom Index). Any responses meeting a pre-defined threshold for a symptom generated an e-mail “alert” to the site nurse who contacted participants within one business day to assess the symptom and provide clinical care | Pain Squad+ a web-based smartphone application using a 22-item survey to assess adolescent cancer pain. If pain reported, real-time self-management recommendations provided and advised to reassess pain in 1 h. If pain score more than 3/10 on three consecutive occasions, an email alert was sent to trained nurses who contacted the adolescent and initiated provider-driven intervention such as medications changes |
| Who provided the intervention | Nurse was alerted to provide care when symptoms worsened | Trained telephone monitors who would refer to oncology nurses | Automated phone calls with study-based NP | Site nurses provided telephone-based follow-up | Nurse contacted the patient when significant pain was detected |
| Telehealth intervention when and how much | Patients received weekly e-mail reminders for between-visit reporting; nurse called participants if alerted to severe symptoms | 1 telephone call each month for 6 months by monitor; nurse called participants if alerted to severe symptoms | Patients called SCH daily; NPs called participants if alerted to severe symptoms | Patients monitored and reported symptoms weekly; nurse called participants if alerted to severe symptoms | Patients completed pain assessments twice daily for 28 days |
| Usual care comparator | Symptoms discussed during medical visit. Patients encouraged to initiate telephone contact between visits for concerning symptoms | Education materials and nurse evaluations at study entry, 6 months, and 9 months | Called the automated symptom reporting system daily and reported presence and severity of the 11 symptoms. Were reminded to call their provider for concerns | Telephone based symptom monitoring without automated reports and paper copies | One-group baseline versus post-study design |
| Tailoring | Intervention continued until treatment completed | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | May also complete ad hoc pain assessment using a truncated 8-item survey anytime between the morning and evening assessments |
RCT randomized control trial, NP nurse practitioner
ROBINS-I (risk of bias judgements in non-randomized studies of interventions)
| Confounding | Selection of participants | Classification of interventions | Deviations from intended interventions | Missing data | Measurement of outcomes | Selection of reported results | Overall | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hintistan 2017 [ | Critical | Serious | Low | Low | Moderate | Serious | Low | Critical |
| Jibb 2017 [ | Critical | Low | Low | Low | Moderate | Serious | Low | Critical |
Four levels for risk of bias: low, moderate, serious, and critical
Fig. 4Meta-analyses: Telehealth versus usual care