Chemotherapy-induced Peripheral Neuropathy Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomised Controlled Trial to Assess the Effectiveness and Cost-effectiveness of Acupuncture in the Management of Chemotherapy-induced Peripheral Neuropathy
The purpose of this study is to determine whether a course of acupuncture is effective in the management of peripheral neuropathy related pain in patients receiving chemotherapy.
Participants and settings:
- Patients with lung, breast, head & neck, colorectal or gynaecological cancer receiving
taxanes or platinum-derivative chemotherapy experiencing CIPN after the end of cycle one will
be the population of the study. The study will take place in a large cancer centre in the
territory (Prince of Wales Hospital).
Recruitment:
- Potential subjects will be identified (through clinic lists and databases of patients who
are undergoing treatment) and approached initially by the relevant clinical team and
screening then undertaken by research staff. The trial will be run ethically, details of
which process can be seen under additional material.
Randomisation:
- Patients will be allocated to a group through computer-generated randomisation to be done
at the Prince of Wales clinical trials unit. Randomisation will consist of minimisation with
a random element (stochastic minimisation), balancing for the treatment types (taxanes or
platinum analogues received) at a ratio of 1:1 to the two groups.
Intervention:
- The acupuncture intervention is described below based on the STRICTA recommendations for
reporting acupuncture trials. In the acupuncture group, patients will receive, in addition to
standard care, a standardised 30-minute acupuncture session needling specific body points
although there will be flexibility in case some points cannot be punctured (ie. in case of
lymphoedema), and alternative points (as in routine practice) may be selected by the
therapists using their discretion to maintain an equal dose of treatment to all patients. The
points will be standardised according to the clinical manifestations of the subjects.
Standard care:
- The comparison arm will be a standard care control arm.
Study duration:
- Treatment duration will be 8 weeks. The duration of each patient's involvement in the study
will be 20 weeks (5 months) with assessments at baseline, end of 8-week treatment, 14 weeks
and 20 weeks. Based on available numbers in the study hospital, recruitment will be at 10
subjects/month, requiring 11 months for trial recruitment. Four months are assigned for trial
set up, preparation and staff training, 5 months for follow-up of last patient recruited, and
4 months for data cleaning, analysis and report writing (=24 months study).
Outcome measures:
1. Functional status and Quality of Life [baseline, week 8, week 14, week 20 to assess
changes from baseline over time]
Primary outcome is assessment of Pain at 8-weeks (end of acupuncture treatment): Pain:
'worst pain during past week' will be measured using the Brief Pain Inventory which
measures pain intensity and its interference with function.
2. Secondary outcomes:
- The NCI-Common Toxicity Criteria (CTC) for Adverse Events will be completed at
baseline and week 8 to assess change from baseline. This is a physician based
grading system that includes criteria and definitions for quantifying and grading
CIPN (both neurosensory and neuromotor components). This grading scale comprises a
sensory and motor assessment and utilises a 5-point scale ranging from grade 1 to
grade 5. Previous studies demonstrated that the CTC scale is a quick to use, easy
to administer and most useful in carrying out a screening procedure for choosing
which patients need a neurological examination.
- The Total Neuropathy Score clinical version (TNSc) will be completed at baseline
and week 8 to assess change from baseline.. The TNS combines information obtained
from grading of symptoms, signs, nerve conduction studies, and quantitative sensory
tests, and provides a single measure to quantify neuropathy.
- Functional assessment of cancer therapy (FACT/GOG-Ntx) will be completed at
baseline, week 8, week 14, week 20 to assess changes from baseline over time. This
is a 38-item self reported questionnaire, divided into two sub-scales: the first
one is a 27-item general assessment of quality of life sub-scale (FACT-G) while the
second one is a 11-item neurotoxicity sub-scale. This tool demonstrated good
internal reliability and construct validity.
- Consumption of analgesics will also be measured with a patient diary, as well as
the presence of other related symptoms (ie. fatigue, sleep, etc) using the 10-item
Symptom Distress Scale at baseline, week 8, week 14, week 20 to assess changes from
baseline over time] .
3. Sensory examination [baseline and at the end of Acupuncture course -8 weeks- to assess
change from baseline] Sensory examination will take place by the doctor/nurse using 10-g
monofilament to lightly touch the patient's hands and feet bilaterally with the patients
eyes closed. The monofilament test is a standardised plastic filament that will be
pressed against parts of the hands and feet. When the filament bends, its tip is
exerting a pressure of 10-gr. Abnormal responses including hyperesthesia, anesthesia or
hypoesthesia will be recorded.
- Neurophysiological testing will include a detailed motor nerve conduction study of
the following nerves on the affected limbs. For upper limbs, the test will include:
median nerve (bilateral) and ulnar nerve (bilateral). For lower limbs, the test
will include peroneal nerve (bilateral), tibial nerve (bilateral). There will be
provision of the most sensitive parameters to register any axonopathy or
demyelination. Distal latencies, amplitudes and conduction velocities will be
measured. F-waves will be also performed. For the sensory nerve conduction part,
the following nerves will be studied. For upper limbs, the test will include:
median nerve (bilateral) and ulnar nerve (bilateral). For lower limbs, it will
include sural nerve (bilateral). We anticipate that the most common abnormalities
will reside in the sensory nerve conduction study with axonal derangement as the
most common manifestation. Knowing the test may cause a little bit discomfort to
participants, so participation in the testing is voluntary. We expect that equal
number of participants in the intervention group and control group will participate
in the testing (n=25 per group).
- Sociodemographic and treatment characteristics will be obtained from the patients'
records or patients themselves at baseline. Patients will be asked about treatment
expectations, how much they believe this method will help them alleviate their pain
and how much faith they have in acupuncture (10-point scales). As CIPN is managed
with dose reductions in clinical practice, chemotherapy dosage documentation
(cumulative dosage received, dose reductions, dosage each cycle, completed number
of cycles, chemotherapy type) will also be collected. The dosage information is
necessary to use this data as a covariate in the data analysis, if the dosing is
not constant across patients. Adverse effects will be monitored and collected from
patients or researchers at each clinic visit for the duration of the acupuncture
treatment.
4. Measurement of costs
We will explore the cost impact data and capture the frequency, type and extent of the costs
of and service utilisation by patients. This will be done at week 14 only covering the period
from start of treatment until week 14. This is the first time a cost evaluation is taking
place in a cancer symptom-related acupuncture trial. More specifically, costs will be
identified, measured and valued using a micro-costing approach (by which each component of
resource use is identified, estimated and a unit cost derived from market prices and national
estimates). The cost analysis will be performed from the perspective of the health service
provider and from a societal perspective. Included in the health care provider costs will be
those accrued by the hospitals and general practitioners. Costs to the patients and their
families, including social care, will be considered as the additional costs for society.
Indirect costs in terms of workdays lost will also included. Data will be collected
prospectively and retrospectively using a questionnaire designed by the University of
Leeds.multiple sources including patient records and patient self reported questionnaires.
The questionnaires will determine health service utilisation as a result of CIPN (e.g.
outpatient or general practitioner visits), patient out of pocket expenses such as over the
counter medicines or transport together with use of services in the social sector such as
home help and support from family and friends. Valuation of resource items including hospital
resources (e.g. bed days and staff time) and community resources (e.g. general practitioner
visits, home help) use will be carried out using national estimates; market prices will be
assigned to medication; non-market items, specifically patient time and informal help
provided by family and friends, will be valued using market wage rates; out of pocket
expenses (e.g. bus fares) will also be obtained. We have used this approach successfully in a
multisite acupressure trial with 500 patients
Data analysis:
- Analyses will include descriptive statistics to summarise the data, analysis of variance to
assess between-groups differences for primary and each of the secondary outcomes, and
regression analysis (such as ANCOVA) using the baseline pain score as covariate. 95% CIs will
also be calculated. In more detail, while a t-test is adequate for analysis, analysis of
covariance will be used with the baseline pain score as a covariate and centre and trial arm
as grouping factors. Equivalent analyses will be performed for the week 20 data (although it
is acknowledged that such analyses would not be independent of the 14-week scores, as it is
likely the week-14 and week-20 values will be correlated). Drop-out cases and non-respondents
will be asked to complete the primary outcome scale (1-item) and the 5 items of the CTC scale
on CIPN in order to capture outcomes in as many patients as possible in the intention to
treat analysis, and if this is not feasible, we will use data imputation (LVCF: last value
carried forward). An intention-to-treat analysis will be carried out.
;
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