Treatment-Related Cancer Clinical Trial
— ACT-CCOfficial title:
Acupressure Intervention to Reduce Treatment-related Symptoms in Children With Cancer or Receiving a Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant
Verified date | October 2019 |
Source | University of California, San Francisco |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Background: Despite advances in symptom management, children undergoing cancer treatment or
receiving a chemotherapy-based Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant (HSCT) often suffer from
moderate to severe symptoms of nausea/vomiting, pain, and fatigue along with psychological
distress. Pharmacologic treatments of symptoms can cause side-effects. Patients, parents, and
clinicians have expressed interest in including non-pharmacologic approaches to improve
symptom management. Acupuncture/acupressure is a promising adjunctive therapy to usual care.
More evidence is needed from well-designed trials with larger samples and rigorous designs in
order to make definitive recommendations about the routine inclusion of acupressure among
pediatric patients being treated for childhood cancer or receiving a HSCT.
Design and Methods 100 dyads (one child with one parent/caregiver) will be randomized 1:1
into 2 study arms (50 children in each arm). Arm A participants will be offered usual care
and professional acupressure five times weekly (15-20 minute sessions) and a parent/caregiver
will be instructed in acupressure delivery for the child as symptoms arise. Arm B
participants will receive usual care alone. (At the study end, Arm B parents will be offered
acupressure instructions.) Children will be enrolled for ~30 days which can occur with one
month of continuous hospital-based treatment or two months of intermittent hospital-based
treatment (inpatient or regular outpatient treatment). Parent and child participants will
receive a follow-up interview one month after completion of the intervention (Arm A) or the
final symptom assessment (Arm B).
Significance This is the first study to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of an
acupressure intervention to decrease treatment-related symptoms in 100 patients in treatment
for a childhood cancer or receiving a chemo-therapy based HSCT.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 95 |
Est. completion date | October 1, 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | October 1, 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 5 Years to 24 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: 1. Children who are either receiving treatment for diagnosis of a childhood cancer (curative or supportive care) or are receiving a chemotherapy-based HSCT. Non-malignant brain central nervous system tumors are considered as a childhood cancer. 2. Ages 5- 24 years old. 3. Be receiving hospital-based treatment (inpatient or outpatient) so that acupressure treatments can be delivered and parents can be trained and monitored. 4. Availability and willingness of a parent or caregiver to deliver acupressure for ages 5-17. For young adults ages 18-24 participation of a parent, close friend or family member/caregiver is preferred but not required. 5. English or Spanish speaking. 6. Receiving treatment at UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital. Exclusion Criteria 1) Children/young adults who meet the above criteria, but whose treating oncologist, health care provider, or a study investigator advises against study participation for physical health, mental health (parent or child) or logistical reasons. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center | San Francisco | California |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of California, San Francisco | Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, Pierre's Birthday Fund |
United States,
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* Note: There are 23 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Decrease in nausea/vomiting severity | assessed using the Pediatric Nausea Assessment Tool (PeNAT)(Dupuis, 2006)(see description below) + a single Question on vomiting for ages 5-17. The MASCC Anti-emesis Tool (MAT) will be used to assess nausea (yes/no) and severity for ages 18+.This composite measure of nausea/vomiting in the child represents a continuum of nausea/vomiting (range=1-8). | past 24 hours for nausea/vomiting measures daily over 30 days of hospital-based treatment (continuous hospitalization or intermittent treatment over 2 months) | |
Secondary | Decreased nausea (PeNAT) | Nausea will be measured using the PeNat scale, validated for ages 4-17 years. Four levels of nausea are defined on this scale: none, mild, moderate and severe, using faces, a preferred method of measuring distress among children. In the case where a child cannot report on nausea, parent report will be sought. Parents report of child's nausea severity was found to be significantly correlated with child reports. Patients ages 18-24 will be given the MAT. | 30 days hospital-based treatment (continuous or intermittent over 2 months) | |
Secondary | Decreased vomiting (Vol, 2016) | Vomiting episodes will be measured as recorded by patients and families using patient diaries (confirmed using review of daily patient electronic medical records (EMR)). Vomiting episodes will be capped so the range will be 1-4+ episodes in the 2 day time-span since the last assessment. Using these two variables we can construct a variable for no nausea and no vomiting which is typically called "complete control" and is a standard outcome for many pharmaceutical antiemetic trials. | 30 days hospitalization (continuous or intermittent over 2 months) | |
Secondary | Use of fewer rescue anti-emetics (from Electronic Medical Records) | This will be categorized as a 1-4+ variable where 1=no rescue antiemetic use and 4+ means that a dose was taken 4 or more times between assessments. (Emetogenicity will be assessed using the newest guidelines.) From electronic medical records (EMR). | 30 days hospital-based treatment (continuous or intermittent over 2 months) | |
Secondary | Complete control of nausea/vomiting | Using the nausea and vomiting variables we will construct a dichotomous variable for no nausea and no vomiting which is typically called "complete control" and is a standard outcome for many pharmaceutical antiemetic trials. | 30 days hospital-based treatment (continuous or intermittent over 2 months) | |
Secondary | Decreased pain interference assessed using the PROMIS Pediatric Pain Interference Scale | (4 items) from the Pediatric Profile 25 v. 2. Pediatric or Parent Proxy Versions assess pain interference in the context of daily activities including interference on physical, psychological and social functioning. (Varni, 2010) | 30 days hospital-based treatment (continuous or intermittent over 2 months) | |
Secondary | Decreased Pain intensity | PROMIS Pediatric or Parent Proxy Version includes 1 question that assesses intensity of pain on a 0-10 scale. This single-item pain intensity question is included in the Pediatric Profile 25 v2 and is not scored but reported using a raw score (e.g., 0 to 10). | 30 days hospital-based treatment (continuous or intermittent over 2 months) | |
Secondary | Decreased pain assessed (ages 5-7) | Faces Pain (Intensity) Scale-Revised (FPS-R)(1 item) children rank severity of pain using 6 gender-neutral faces depicting 'no pain' to 'most pain'; scores range from 0 to 10. | 30 days of hospital-based treatment (continuous or intermittent over 2 months) | |
Secondary | Decreased fatigue symptoms | PROMIS Pediatric Profile 25 v2. This 4-item scale includes two domains: feeling tired and (lack of) energy and its impact on daily life. | 30 days of hospital-based treatment (continuous or intermittent over 2 months) | |
Secondary | Decreased depression symptoms | (4 items) from PROMIS pediatric profile 25 v 2.0 Among young adults aged 18+. 4-item subscales of PROMIS Adult Profile 29 v2.0 will be used. | 30 days hospital-based treatment (continuous or intermittent over 2 months) | |
Secondary | Decreased anxiety | (4 items) from PROMIS pediatric profile 25 v 2.0 | 30 days hospital-based treatment (continuous or intermittent over 2 months) | |
Secondary | Increased Well-being | PROMIS Pediatric Positive Affect measure. This measures positive emotions (well-being) which can reduce experience of symptom burden and protect health. (4 items) Among parents/caregivers the study used Positive Affect Subscale of the PANAS (5-items): This positive affect sub-scale of the 10-item PANAS scale (i-PANAS-SF) assesses positive or pleasurable engagement with the environment, well-being, and satisfaction with life. | 30 days hospital-based treatment (continuous or intermittent over 2 months) | |
Secondary | Fewer overall symptoms assessed using the Symptom Screening in Pediatrics (SSPedi) tool (Tomlinson, 2014) | This pediatric cancer-specific symptom screening and assessment scale measures physical and psychological symptoms (e.g., feeling angry, sad or worried, tired, mouth sores, headache, constipation or diarrhea, problems thinking or remembering, body changes, or appetite loss, among others) in 15 questions. | 30 days hospital-based treatment (continuous or intermittent over 2 months) | |
Secondary | Decreased depression symptoms using the PROMIS depression (adult) measure. | 4 item measure used to assess depression among the child's parent/caregiver using subscales of PROMIS Adult Profile 29 v2.0 will be used. | 30 days hospital-based treatment (continuous or intermittent over 2 months) | |
Secondary | Decreased anxiety assessed using PROMIS anxiety (adult) | 4 item measure used to assess anxiety among the child's parent/caregiver using subscales of PROMIS Adult Profile 29 v2.0 will be used. | 30 days hospital-based treatment (continuous or intermittent over 2 months) | |
Secondary | Fewer PTSD symptoms, (PCL-5) (adult) | the Post-traumatic Stress Disorder Checklist is a 20 item measure - updated to use DSM5 criteria. Responses assess frequency and intensity of symptoms (strong internal consistency, test-retest reliability and validity). Total symptom scores will be compared between groups. | 1 month after end of 30 days trial enrollment | |
Secondary | Increased Caregiver Self-Efficacy (parent) | This 6 item scale is adapted from Bandura, 1977, Lorig, 1989; Barlow, 2000) and previously used in parents of children with disabilities (excellent psychometric reliability and validity). | 1 month after end of 30 day trial enrollment |
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Withdrawn |
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