| Literature DB >> 35551088 |
Ravi B Parikh1,2, William Ferrell2, Jonathan Wakim2, Joelle Williamson2, Neda Khan2,3, Michael Kopinsky3, Mohan Balachandran3, Peter E Gabriel4, Yichen Zhang2, Lynn M Schuchter4, Lawrence N Shulman4, Jinbo Chen4, Mitesh S Patel2, Christopher R Manz5,6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Patients with advanced cancers often face significant symptoms from their cancer and adverse effects from cancer-associated therapy. Patient-generated health data (PGHD) are routinely collected information about symptoms and activity levels that patients either directly report or passively record using devices such as wearable accelerometers. The objective of this study was to test the impact of an intervention integrating remote collection of PGHD with clinician and patient nudges to inform communication between patients with advanced cancer and their oncology team regarding symptom burden and functional status. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This single-centre prospective randomised controlled trial randomises patients with metastatic gastrointestinal or lung cancers into one of three arms: (A) usual care, (B) an intervention that integrates PGHD (including weekly text-based symptom surveys and passively recorded step counts) into a dashboard delivered to oncology clinicians at each visit and (C) the same intervention as arm B but with an additional text-based active choice intervention to patients to encourage discussing their symptoms with their oncology team. The study will enrol approximately 125 participants. The coprimary outcomes are patient perceptions of their oncology team's understanding of their symptoms and their functional status. Secondary outcomes are intervention utility and adherence. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This study has been approved by the institutional review board at the University of Pennsylvania. Study results will be disseminated using methods that describe the results in ways that key stakeholders can best understand and implement. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBERS: NCT04616768 and 843 616. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: HEALTH SERVICES ADMINISTRATION & MANAGEMENT; ONCOLOGY; Protocols & guidelines
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35551088 PMCID: PMC9109034 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-054675
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 3.006
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion | Exclusion |
| English-speaking | Age under 18 years |
| Diagnosis of incurable or stage IV (metastatic or recurrent) lung (non-small cell or small cell) or GI cancers | Wheelchair user or bedbound over the past 7 days (patients are not excluded for the use of walkers or canes) |
| Receive primary oncology care with a thoracic or GI medical oncology specialist at the PCAM (ie, does not have a local oncologist that provides cancer care) | Receive checkpoint inhibitor monotherapy or oral tyrosine kinase inhibitor monotherapy |
| Currently receiving intravenous chemotherapy or planned receipt within 2 weeks of enrolment | Receive chemotherapy infusions outside of PCAM |
| Possess a smart phone that can receive Short Message Service (SMS) text messages and Bluetooth capability that can connect to the Fitbit application | Patients with lung cancer enrolled in an ongoing palliative care clinical trial |
| Primary oncologist is not in thoracic or GI oncology groups at PCAM. Notably, patients who receive part of their chemotherapy regimen at home will still be allowed to enrol. | |
| Clinician concerns about behavioural health issues that may prevent engagement with text message prompts | |
| Enrolled in another interventional clinical trial (as clinical trials often have an existing symptom-reporting structure); non-interventional clinical trials are permitted (eg, trials that only involve blood draws) |
GI, gastrointestinal; PCAM, Perelman Center for Advanced Medicine.
Figure 1Trial schema. W2H, Way to Health. CRC, Clinical Research Coordinator
Pro Survey
| 1. In the last 7 days, how | ||||
| Never | Rarely | Occasionally | Frequently | Almost constantly |
| 2. In the last 7 days, how often did you have | ||||
| Never | Rarely | Occasionally | Frequently | Almost constantly |
| 3. In the last 7 days, what was the | ||||
| None | Mild | Moderate | Severe | Very severe |
| 4. In the last 7 days, what was the severity of your | ||||
| None | Mild | Moderate | Severe | Very severe |
| 5. In the last 7 days, how much did your | ||||
| Not at all | A little bit | Somewhat | Quite a bit | Very much |
| 6. In the last 7 days, how often did you have | ||||
| Never | Rarely | Occasionally | Frequently | Almost constantly |
| 7. In the last 7 days, how often did you feel | ||||
| Never | Rarely | Occasionally | Frequently | Almost constantly |
| 8. Over the past week I would generally rate my activity as | ||||
| 0, normal with no limitations | ||||
| 1, not my normal self, but able to be up and about with fairly normal activities | ||||
| 2, not feeling up to most things, but in bed or chair less than half the day | ||||
| 3, able to do little activity and spend most of the day in bed or a chair | ||||
| 4, pretty much bedridden, rarely out of bed | ||||
Figure 2PROStep dashboard. ED, emergency department. OEC, Oncology Evaluation Center. ECOG, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status
Figure 3Intervention by patient arm. PRO, patient-reported outcome; W2H, Way to Health.
Primary and secondary outcomes
| Source | Arms | Description | Note |
| Primary outcomes | |||
| All | ‘How well do you feel your oncology team understands your symptoms (eg, nausea, vomiting, weight loss, etc)?’ | 5-point Likert scale | |
| All | ‘How well do you feel your oncology team understands your activity level and ability to function?’ | 5-point Likert scale | |
| Secondary outcomes (utility) | |||
| All | ‘How well do you feel your oncology team understands your symptoms (eg, nausea, vomiting, weight loss, etc)?’ | 5-point Likert scale | |
| All | ‘How well do you feel your oncology team understands your activity level and ability to function?’ | 5-point Likert scale | |
| Secondary outcomes (adherence) | |||
| B and C | Mean patient adherence | Adherence is met when the patients complete their weekly survey (ie, adherence to PRO) and have step data for 4 of 7 days of the week (ie, adherence to Fitbit platform), divided by the total number of weeks that the patient is enrolled in the trial. | |
| B and C | Mean patient adherence | ||
| Secondary outcomes (PROStep data trends) | |||
| B and C | Mean and median survey scores | The composite score is the sum of the scores for each domain in the PRO survey, and the mean or median composite symptom score is the mean or median of all composite scores collected during the study. | |
| B and C | Step data | Mean daily step counts for all days that Fitbit data are collected | |
PRO, patient-reported outcome.