Advanced Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Multisite, Parallel, RCT Comparing the Effectiveness of an Early Palliative Care Intervention, the PediQUEST Response to Pediatric Oncology Symptom Experience , Versus Usual Cancer Care in Children and Adolescents With Advanced Cancer
Verified date | May 2023 |
Source | Massachusetts General Hospital |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
PediQUEST Response proposes a new system of care that expects to improve quality of life in children, adolescents, and young adults with advanced cancer and their parents. The investigators want to learn whether patients that are cared for using PediQUEST Response do in fact feel better than those receiving usual care. National recommendations call for early palliative care (PC) integration for seriously ill children to ease suffering, however, very few randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have evaluated whether PC improves child and family outcomes. In prior work, the investigators developed the Pediatric Quality of Life and Evaluation of Symptoms Technology (PediQUEST/PQ), a software that collects electronic Patient-Reported Outcomes (e-PROMS) and generates feedback reports. Now, the PI and research team developed PediQUEST Response (Response to Pediatric Oncology Symptom Experience). PediQUEST Response includes an enhanced PediQUEST system (web-based and with an App that allows to answer surveys and see reports), that is coupled with early integration of a palliative care consulting team (Response team). This dual strategy will help to standardize the family report of distress, which will be done through the PediQUEST system. It will also help standardize the providers' response to such distress, as providers will be specifically trained. Pilot work for PediQUEST Response found it feasible, well received by families and oncologists, and potentially effective. Thus, the overall goal of this study is to conduct a RCT of PQ Response versus usual care at four large pediatric oncology centers among 136 children ≥2 years old with advanced cancer. Hypotheses include a) children receiving the intervention will have better (higher) quality of life scores b) parents of children in the intervention group will report better state-anxiety, depression and symptom-related stress scores, and c) intervention group families will demonstrate higher levels of activation.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 196 |
Est. completion date | September 14, 2022 |
Est. primary completion date | September 14, 2022 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 2 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion criteria: Pediatric oncology patients (children, adolescents, or young adults), and one of their parents, receiving routine cancer care at one of the participating centers -and not in remission and off cancer-directed treatment-that have: - (i) advanced cancer defined as: at least a 2-week history of progressive, recurrent, or non-responsive cancer of any type, or any brainstem tumor, or a grade IV Glioblastoma Multiforme, or decision not to pursue cancer-directed therapy in place, or or any other progressive/recurrent solid or brain tumor, and are - (ii) palliative care naive, defined as the palliative care team not currently integrated into their regular cancer care. Exclusion criteria: The patient-parent dyad would be excluded if - patients are older than 18 years of age and no parent is involved in his/her care, or - if patient is under the care of foster parents who do not have legal guardianship, or - if both parents do not speak English or Spanish, or are unable to understand and complete surveys, or - if the patient has a non-brainstem low-grade glioma with localized progression/relapse only, or - is expected to receive a stem cell transplant within the next 18 weeks, or - life expectancy is less than two months. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Boston Children's Hospital | Boston | Massachusetts |
United States | Dana Farber Cancer Institute | Boston | Massachusetts |
United States | Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago | Chicago | Illinois |
United States | Texas Children's Hospital | Houston | Texas |
United States | The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia | Philadelphia | Pennsylvania |
United States | Seattle Children's Research Institute | Seattle | Washington |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Joanne Wolfe, MD, MPH | Ann & Robert H Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago, Baylor College of Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Children's Hospitals and Clinics of Minnesota, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Deakin University, National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR), Nationwide Children's Hospital, Seattle Children's Hospital, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, University of Alabama at Birmingham |
United States,
Dussel V, Orellana L, Holder R, Porth R, Avery M, Wolfe J. A multisite randomized controlled trial of an early palliative care intervention in children with advanced cancer: The PediQUEST Response Study Protocol. PLoS One. 2022 Nov 8;17(11):e0277212. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0277212. eCollection 2022. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Child Quality of Life | Difference between intervention and control arms of the mean Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory 4.0 (PedsQL) total scores over 16 weeks, as reported by (a) the parent for all enrolled children and (b) the patient (if 5 years of age or older). PedsQL total scores are calculated as the average of the 23 items that integrate the tool. Scores range from 0-100 (100 is excellent quality of life). A score of <70 is considered fair/poor quality of life. | 16 weeks (measured weekly from point of randomization) | |
Secondary | Child Quality of Life - subscales | Difference between intervention and control arms of the mean Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory 4.0 (PedsQL) subscale scores (physical and psychosocial) over 16 weeks, as reported by (a) the parent for all enrolled children and (b) the patient (if 5 years of age or older). PedsQL subscale scores that will be utilized in the study are the physical subscale (average of the 8 physcial items) and the psychosocial subscale (average of the 15 remaining items, which cover the domains of emotion, social and school). Subscale scores range from 0-100 (100 is excellent quality of life) | 16 weeks (measured weekly from point of randomization) | |
Secondary | Child Symptom Burden | Difference between intervention and control arms of the mean PediQUEST-Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale (PQ-MSAS) total scores over 16 weeks, as reported by (a) the parent for all enrolled children and (b) the patient, if 13 years of age or older. PediQUEST MSAS total scores are calculated as the average of the 26 individual symptom scores that are included in the teens and caregivers versions of the tool. Individual symptom scores are calculated as the average of the three symtpom questions. Individual symptom scores and total scores range from 0-100, 100 indicates higher symptom burden. | 16 weeks (measured weekly from point of randomization) | |
Secondary | Child Symptom Burden- subscales | Difference between intervention and control arms of the mean PediQUEST-Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale (PQ-MSAS) subscale scores over 16 weeks, as reported by (a) the parent for all enrolled children and (b) the patient, if 13 years of age or older. PediQUEST MSAS subscale scores that will be used in this study include the PediQUEST-MSAS physical (average of 8 prevalent physical symptoms) and PediQUEST-MSAS psychological (average of 6 psychological items). Subscale scores range from 0-100, 100 indicates higher symptom burden. | 16 weeks (measured weekly from point of randomization) | |
Secondary | Parental distress (anxiety) | Difference between trial arms of the mean Spielberger's-State Anxiety Inventory scores over 16 weeks. Scores range from 20 to 80, with higher scores correlating with greater anxiety. | 16 weeks (measured every four weeks from point of randomization) | |
Secondary | Parental distress (depression) | Difference between trial arms of the mean Center for Epidemiologic Studies Short Depression Scale scores over 16 weeks. Scores range from 0 to 30 (Score of 10 or higher indicates the presence of significant depressive symptoms). | 16 weeks (measured every four weeks from point of randomization) | |
Secondary | Parental distress (stress) | Difference between trial arms of the change in symptom-related stress scores measured with an adapted version of the stress-portion of the Response to Stress Questionnaire-Pain at study entry and the 16-week point. The tool assesses 12 potential stress sources. Scores range from 1-4 (higher means more stress). Symptom-related stress score calculated as the sum of the 12 item scores. | 16 weeks (measured at study entry and 16 weeks) | |
Secondary | Family Activation (coping) | Change in BRIEF-Cope active coping, planning, and instrumental support scale scores between study entry and 16 weeks between intervention and control arms. Each item is scored 1-4 (higher means using that strategy a lot). Each scale score is calculated as the average of the two items that measure the strategy. | 16 weeks (measured at study entry and 16 weeks) | |
Secondary | Family Activation (symptom treatment activation - use of complementary therapies (UCT) - number) | Difference between intervention and control arms in "symptom treatment activation" over 16 weeks, measured every four weeks as the total No. of complementary therapies (CT), as reported by parents.(this outcome is a count, not a score) | 16 weeks (measured every four weeks from point of randomization) | |
Secondary | Family Activation (symptom treatment activation - UCT - types) | Difference between intervention and control arms in "symptom treatment activation" over 16 weeks, measured every four weeks as the No. of different CT, as reported by parents. | 16 weeks (measured every four weeks from point of randomization) | |
Secondary | Family Activation (symptom treatment activation - use of psychosocial services) | Difference between intervention and control arms in "symptom treatment activation" over 16 weeks, measured every four weeks as the No. of psychosocial clinician encounters documented in the medical record. | 16 weeks (measured every four weeks from point of randomization) |
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