Melanoma Clinical Trial
Official title:
Validation of Mobile Technologies for Clinical Assessment, Monitoring, and Intervention (SBIR Topic 342, Direct to Phase II- Vignet, Inc.)
Verified date | November 2018 |
Source | Northwestern University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The proposed study builds upon the success of our research program (STU00017005: Interventions to teach melanoma patients skin self-examination and the continuation STU0201983) designed to increase early detection of melanomas before they metastasize. This study seeks to expand the use of our efficacious skin self-examination (SSE) training program to first-degree relatives with automated support with reminders and the dermatologist coaching about pictures of moles submitted by user. In 2015 there are more than 1 million living melanoma patients in the United States (US), and almost 500,000 were age 40-60 years. If each melanoma patient has 2.79 first-degree relatives (children, and siblings of melanoma patients), then there are 2.79 million first-degree relatives and 1 million melanoma patients or 3.79 million people at-risk to develop melanoma, who are predominantly non-Hispanic White. A first-degree relative (FDR) is the parent, sibling or child of a melanoma patient. In 2015, approximately 73,870 individuals in the US will be diagnosed with invasive melanoma and about 9,940 will die from the disease. People with a history of melanoma have 10 times greater risk of developing a second new melanoma relative to the general population. A first-degree relative of a melanoma patient (parent, child, sibling) has an 8 times greater chance of developing melanoma. Early detection with surgical excision at an early stage when treatment is usually more effective is the only proven curative strategy. Thus, enhanced surveillance for melanoma patients and screening for their first-degree relatives, who have the same skin type (skin that easily sunburns) and melanoma-risk habits (sunny vacations) as the melanoma survivor, has the potential to detect melanomas in the early stages where treatment prognosis is optimal. Indeed, several societies recommend routine screening by a physician for persons with a family history of melanoma.
Status | Withdrawn |
Enrollment | 0 |
Est. completion date | December 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | December 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 16 Years to 70 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Inclusion Criteria for Melanoma Patient: - Melanoma patient with Stage 0-IIIA diagnosed within the last 5 years - At least 2 months post-surgical treatment - Age 18-70 years old - Has Internet access - Owns and can use a smartphone - Has an adult (18-70 years old) first-degree relative (sibling, parent, child) - Willing to recruit a first-degree relative to be educated in SSE - If the melanoma patient is selected to participate as a skin check partner by their first-degree relative, then they may serve as a skin check partner over the duration of the 4 months; however, no data is collected from skin check partners. Inclusion Criteria for First-degree Relative: - Have a first-degree relative who is melanoma patient with Stage 0-IIIA diagnosed within the last five years - No personal history of melanoma - Age 18-70 years old - Teen child 16 to 17 years of age. - Owns and can use a smartphone that can take close-up pictures of moles and can upload pictures of moles to the HIPPA secure website - Has Internet access - Willing to participate in two online assessments with an optional third survey if the person finds a clinically concerning mole and has an appointment with a primary care physician or a dermatologist to evaluate the clinically concerning mole, and receive reminders via the mobile device Exclusion Criteria: - Exclusion Criteria for Melanoma Patient: • Subjects overburdened with other co-morbid diseases (e.g. chronic immunosuppression from organ transplantation) or medical treatments (e.g. chemotherapy) Exclusion Criteria for First-degree Relative: - Subjects overburdened with other co-morbid diseases (e.g. chronic immunosuppression from organ transplantation) or medical treatments (e.g. chemotherapy) - Do not own a smartphone |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine Department of Dermatology | Chicago | Illinois |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Northwestern University | National Institutes of Health (NIH), Vibrent Health |
United States,
Robinson JK, Gaber R, Hultgren B, Eilers S, Blatt H, Stapleton J, Mallett K, Turrisi R, Duffecy J, Begale M, Martini M, Bilimoria K, Wayne J. Skin self-examination education for early detection of melanoma: a randomized controlled trial of Internet, workbook, and in-person interventions. J Med Internet Res. 2014 Jan 13;16(1):e7. doi: 10.2196/jmir.2883. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Performance of skin-self examination | The first-degree relative and their skin check partner check about 5 moles/ freckles monthly, and upload a photograph of one mole with a decision about whether the mole is benign, needs to be watched for change, or may be malignant and they need to see a doctor. | 4-months | |
Secondary | Engage a partner in helping to check hard to see locations. | Self- reported responses to survey | 4-months |
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