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Clinical Trial Summary

Introduction: Person-centred care is based on the assumption that every person has resources that should be used in the care situation. In order for this to happen the patient has to be able to effectively communicate his/her symptoms. This protocol describes the analysis of a digital picture-based tool for communication support for children with cancer aged 5-17 years, who undergo high-dose methotrexate treatment. The advantage of a non-linguistic based platform, beside the expected clinical outcomes, is that it can be used in multiple national studies with minimal translation. Methods and analysis: Two studies will be conducted in a hybrid design, i.e., a crossover design will be used for the intervention (effects), and a mixed-methods design will be used for the process evaluation. Qualitative interviews will be carried out with children with cancer, their legal guardians and case-related healthcare professionals as part of the process evaluation. The interviews will address the experiences of the intervention and frequency of use from the child's perspective. Interview transcripts will be analyzed qualitative descriptively. The digital communication tool will collect child self-reports of symptoms/emotions. The children will be monitored for biomarkers of stress and pain (neuropeptides, neurosteroids and peripheral steroids) in venous blood samples, in-app estimation levels for the children, drug consumption. Person-centeredness will be evaluated with the questionnaire Visual CARE Measure. Ethics: Ethical approval was obtained from the Swedish Ethical Review Authority (ref 2019-02392; 2020-02601).


Clinical Trial Description

BACKGROUND Failure in symptom relief in children with cancer leads to physical and emotional distress. Success in symptom relief is assumed to decrease distress. To initiate a person-centred approach to child-centred care means to elucidate, listen to and affirm the child´s story. Assessments of distress and symptoms are essential in symptom relief for children with cancer. However, the exclusive assessment of pain intensity can be considered a restrictive description of the experience. Novel assessment tools that give a broader description of symptoms are needed. Self-reports of symptoms are the gold standard for measuring symptoms, and strategies to achieve symptom relief to represent a dynamic and interactive process. A complex intervention has been chosen, and the project follows the Medical Research Council´s key principles and actions for consideration in the developing of the intervention. AIM This project aims to investigate whether a person-centred communication intervention employing a new digital communication tool for children undergoing cancer treatment decrease the children's self-reported distress Research questions: Does adding a digital reporting and communication tool, decrease distress in children with cancer, aged 5-17 years, who undergo high-dose methotrexate treatment? Does the adding of a digital reporting and communication tool, increase person-centredness in children with cancer, aged 5-17 years, who undergo high-dose methotrexate treatment? Hypothesis: (i) Person-centred communication with children undergoing cancer treatment, applying a digital reporting and communication tool, will lead to reduced self-reported distress on an analogue assessment tool (paper sheet) (primary outcome), a decrease in neuropeptides, neurosteroids and peripheral steroids for stress and pain in blood, and an increased person-centeredness (secondary outcomes) (effect). (ii) The person-centred communication is performed in child-centred ways to proactively assess children's symptoms (process) and will be evaluated with frequency of use and feasibility. METHODS/DESIGN Study design The children will participate in a cross-over design where they are their own controls. This is a hybrid design, which evaluates both the effects and the implementation (process). The participant is given a code in a predetermined order; the code shows whether he or she should start either with intervention (application) or with the control conditions. Randomization of the codes occurs in advance at randomizer.org, and the researcher always picks the codes in a predetermined order without knowing if it is intervention or control. This is revealed when the participant has agreed to participate in the study. Participating children participate twice, once as a control and once with e-health support Pictorial support in Person-centered care for children (PicPecc). ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04433650
Study type Interventional
Source Göteborg University
Contact Stefan Nilsson, PhD
Phone +46738538951
Email stefan.nilsson.4@gu.se
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date April 1, 2021
Completion date June 30, 2025

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