Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04613440 |
Other study ID # |
20-03021615 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
July 21, 2021 |
Est. completion date |
August 2025 |
Study information
Verified date |
May 2024 |
Source |
Weill Medical College of Cornell University |
Contact |
Melissa K Frey, MD, MS |
Phone |
212-746-3049 |
Email |
mkf2002[@]med.cornell.edu |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The purpose of this study is to assess an intervention that incorporates engagement
strategies with a medical team navigator, an educational video and accessible genetic testing
services to maximize the genetic testing and education of at-risk relatives. In this study,
first degree relatives who agree to participate will either receive this intervention or
standard of care. The investigators do not know if the facilitated interventional method will
be more effective than the standard of care method. This research is being done because
identification of patients with inherited gynecologic/breast cancer syndromes is critical to
enable delivery of tailored cancer treatment and cancer prevention to both the patients and
their at-risk relatives. Cascade genetic testing, defined as extending genetic testing to the
family members of affected patients, results in a more precise risk assessment and initiation
of appropriate cancer screening and prevention strategies. Therefore, this trial will compare
the efficacy of a multicomponent facilitated intervention for first degree relatives vs.
standard of care in terms of the overall proportion of first degree relatives who complete
genetic testing by 6 months (primary outcome).
Description:
This prospective randomized controlled trial will compare the efficacy of a multicomponent
facilitated cascade testing intervention. One hundred and fifty probands with a diagnoses of
a BRCA1/2 mutation will be enrolled and randomized to the intervention vs. control arms.
Probands will be asked to share the names and contact information for all FDR (First Degree
Relative) with whom they have shared their genetic testing results. One hundred and fifty
probands will be recruited and randomized and, therefore, based on our institutional
experience, the investigators anticipate on average 3 FDRs per proband, therefore up to 450
FDRs. Probands randomized to the standard of care group will be instructed to share a family
letter (providing information on the familial mutation) with their FDRs and encourage FDRs to
complete genetic testing. In the intervention group, a patient navigator will provide
facilitated support, including an initial genetic counseling call, an email with a link to an
educational video, and, for individuals who are interested in completing testing - a link to
create an account for a free genetic testing saliva kit and a follow-up call to discuss the
results and ensure participants are connected with their primary care provider or other
clinician, as appropriate. Participating FDRs will complete quality of life assessments. FDRs
found to have BRCA1/2 mutations will be followed to determine if they completed cancer
risk-reducing surveillance or surgery as a result of the genetic testing results. Analyses
will assess the proportion of first degree relatives who complete genetic testing by 6 months
(primary outcome), as well as the proportion who engage subsequently in recommended
risk-reducing behaviors by 18 months and quality of life; distributions of time between
proband diagnosis and first degree relative testing; and potential covariate correlations.
Probands at WCM only who do not meet eligibility criteria for randomization to the
intervention and control arms will be offered enrollment in a third arm, in which they will
receive the intervention in addition to the option for referral to patient advocacy/support
groups including FORCE: Facing Hereditary Cancer EMPOWERED, Sharsheret, SHARE, LatinaSHARE,
Oneinforty, Susan G. Komen, Any Mountain, and Genetic Support Foundation, for additional
guidance. Probands enrolled in this third arm only will be asked to share the names and
contact information for all first, second, and third-degree relatives with whom they have
shared their genetic testing results. We estimate enrolling up to 200 subjects into this
exploratory third arm (50 probands and 150 Relatives including first, second, and
third-degree relatives).The combined total enrollment for the randomized probands and FDRs,
and the probands and relatives (first, second, and third-degree relatives) enrolled in the
third arm will total 800. To recruit patients for all arms of this study, we will identify
eligible probands from any of the following sources: Genetic Counselors, Institutional
Clinicians, BRCA Genetics Conferences, and by reviewing clinic schedules on weekly basis for
potentially eligible patients.