Prostate Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
Prostate Cancer Symptom Management for Low Literacy Men
This study will compare a newly-developed patient education program to help men with localized prostate cancer manage treatment-related side-effects versus usual care. The new intervention will be developed for men with lower health literacy. That means that the education materials will be developed for sixth grade reading level or lower. The materials will include lots of examples and illustrations to make it easier for people understand the information.
Prostate cancer has recently surpassed lung cancer to become the most common cancer of
American men. The estimated number of new prostate cancer cases in 2005 is expected to be
232,090, up from 198,000 in 2002. Prostate cancer represents 29% of all new cancer diagnoses
in men and is comparable to the incidence of breast cancer in women. Prostate cancer
continues to disproportionately affect minority men. For patients with early, localized
prostate cancer, there are a number of treatment options, including surgical removal of the
prostate, radiation therapy (external beam or implantation of radioactive "seeds"), hormonal
therapy, cryoablation, or expectant monitoring ("watchful waiting"). Most of these currently
available treatments for localized prostate cancer carry the risk of a number of iatrogenic
symptoms, including urinary incontinence, ED, and others that vary depending on the treatment
received.
The need for symptom management education is greater for men with lower health literacy.
Health literacy - "the ability to which individuals have the capacity to obtain, process, and
understand health information services needed to make appropriate health decisions" - has
been shown to be strongly related to health status and health outcomes. Persons with lower
health literacy skills are significantly less likely to take preventive actions to improve
their health. Health literacy is a particular concern for men with prostate cancer because
African-American men, a group with a significantly higher prevalence of prostate cancer, are
over-represented among lower literacy men with prostate cancer.3 The study proposed here will
develop and evaluate in a randomized controlled trial (RCT) an empirically-derived symptom
management intervention for lower literacy men with prostate cancer. The intervention will be
based on a biopsychosocial model of prostate cancer symptom management developed from the
more general the UCSF Symptom Management Model (SMM) and Bandura's Self-Efficacy Theory.
The efficacy of the intervention will be evaluated with 200 men with localized prostate
cancer randomized to receive either the new tailored symptom management program or usual
care. Participants in both the intervention and control groups will receive a booklet on
coping with cancer available to all patients treated at the UCSF Comprehensive Cancer Center.
Intervention group participants also will receive a new symptom management intervention
tailored to their individual symptom profile. Both groups will be followed for 6 months after
enrollment, with assessments at enrollment and 5 additional timepoints.
The proposed research project includes the following specific aims:
1. Conduct an RCT to evaluate a tailored symptom management intervention targeted to lower
literacy men with localized prostate cancer.
The investigators hypothesize men who receive the tailored symptom management
intervention (N=100) will report significantly less symptom distress at the 6-month
follow-up than men in the control condition (N=100). Symptom distress will be measured
by the Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite (EPIC) Urinary Bother and Sexual Bother
sub-scales. The intervention and control groups will be stratified by literacy level and
type of prostate cancer treatment.
2. Complete a planned training experience that will include courses in responsible conduct
of research, symptom management, cancer care, cancer prevention, cancer epidemiology,
clinical research with diverse communities, and longitudinal analysis methods that will
provide the knowledge and skills necessary to successfully conduct the RCT.
3. Assemble a group of key personnel with expertise necessary to guide the training
experience and RCT. The primary mentor will be Leslie Schover, PhD, an expert in cancer
symptom management. Other key personnel will include Stephen J. Lepore, PhD, Principal
Investigator of a previous prostate cancer psychosocial intervention study; Brian J.
Miles, MD, an expert in prostate cancer treatment; and Robert Morgan, PhD, a senior
methodologist.
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