Breast Cancer Clinical Trial
NCT number | NCT00186524 |
Other study ID # | 4 BB-2901 |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Completed |
Phase | Phase 2 |
First received | September 14, 2005 |
Last updated | March 11, 2011 |
Verified date | March 2011 |
Source | Stanford University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | United States: Institutional Review Board |
Study type | Interventional |
Women with primary breast cancer may benefit from participating in supports groups as they
cope with treatment and the psychological challenges of survivorship. Studies have
documented that these women benefit from support groups run in a university setting;
however, no one has documented that they benefit from community cancer support groups. Many
community cancer support groups exist and provide service to a large number of women with
breast cancer. It is important to know if these groups are providing comparable service to
well researched support groups. We conducted this study as the first randomized study of
community compared to university-style support groups. Women had a 50/50 chance of being
assigned to either a community or a university style support group based on a coin flip.
This study took place in two sites The Wellness Community East Bay (Walnut Creek) and San
Francisco. Two community groups were studied.
i) This study evaluated the strengths and weaknesses of two community-based support group
interventions for breast cancer patients [The Wellness (TWC) and Cancer Support (CSC)
Communities, in the San Francisco area]. We compared them with a type of therapy developed
in the university setting (Stanford's Supportive-Expressive group therapy), studied which
aspects are most effective, and who benefits the most. We compared these women on change in
emotional distress, means of coping with cancer, and social and family support. In addition,
change in physiological response to stress was measured using saliva samples.
ii) We were able to achieve recruitment for 6 of 8 groups proposed. We randomized 72 women
in blocks of 12 taking consecutive women per site until we accrued 12 for each group. Of
those, 61 women actually attended groups, of those 46 women to date completed at least one
follow-up and were available for analysis for this report. We screened 108 women, 16 who
were screened out on initial phone contact, 20 women began to go through our baseline
interviews and assessments and either decided not to enroll or dropped out before we could
compose a group for the second S.F. randomization. Our final two follow-up assessments for
our final group in the East Bay are being conducted right now (8 month) and will be
conducted in October, 2002 (12 month) so they are not available for assay or analysis for
this final report.
iii) We examined 5 outcome variables for this report and found that women participating in
the community groups changed at about the same level over the 4 months of group therapy as
the women in the Stanford groups. This was true for depression symptoms, trauma symptoms,
social support, self-efficacy, and post-traumatic-growth. These analyses are preliminary
until we complete our final follow-up assessments. It is encouraging for the community
groups that women benefited at the same rate as they did in the well-researched Stanford
groups. Conclusions for this study are somewhat limited because we could not complete the
recruitment of our entire sample. However, there is every reason to suppose that community
groups are as effective at serving women with primary breast cancer as Stanford's groups
though they are based on very different ideas of therapy. It is important to note that all
of these groups were led by therapists, and that we may have found other results if the
groups had been led by peers or other types of professionals. This study reduces the human
and economic cost of breast cancer in California by validating community groups usually
offered free to women with breast cancer.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 0 |
Est. completion date | |
Est. primary completion date | |
Accepts healthy volunteers | |
Gender | Female |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: 1. be > 18 years old 2. be diagnosed with primary breast cancer (Stages I-III, without metastasis or recurrence) within the past 5 years 3. be able to read, speak, and understand English; 4. be < 18 months post treatment; - Exclusion Criteria: participation in more than 8 sessions of a support group. |
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Cancer Support Community | San Francisco | California |
United States | Stanford University | Stanford | California |
United States | The Wellness Community | Walnut Creek | California |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Stanford University | California Breast Cancer Research Program, The Dana Foundation, The Wellness Community |
United States,
Cordova MJ, Giese-Davis J, Golant M, Kronnenwetter C, Chang V, McFarlin S, Spiegel D. Mood disturbance in community cancer support groups. The role of emotional suppression and fighting spirit. J Psychosom Res. 2003 Nov;55(5):461-7. — View Citation
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