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Clinical Trial Summary

Given the growing strain on the Veterans Administration resulting from increasing caseloads of cancer patients, interventions are badly needed that assist patients in managing their illness, improve quality of life and avoid acute episodes that result in urgent care use and increased mortality. Previous studies have found that cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy can effectively manage their own symptoms when monitored using automated telephone calls. Such technology, however, may challenge the number of veterans who lack social support and/or independence. Our goal is to develop and test a technology that not only monitors patients automatically by telephone, but also gives them self management advice and engages a friend or family member to serve as a CarePartner willing to play a limited role in identifying patient symptoms and psychosocial needs to reinforce self management and provide social support. Should such technology be successful, it could substantially improve the quality of life of veterans and their families during the stresses of chemotherapy without substantially increasing the cost of care.


Clinical Trial Description

Background:

Given the growing strain on the Veterans Administration resulting from increasing caseloads of cancer patients, interventions are badly needed that assist patients in managing their illness, improve quality of life and avoid acute episodes that result in urgent care use and increased mortality. Previous studies have found that cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy can effectively manage their own symptoms when monitored using automated telephone calls. Such technology, however, may challenge the number of veterans who lack social support and/or independence. Our goal is to develop and test a technology that not only monitors patients automatically by telephone, but also gives them self management advice and engages a friend or family member to serve as a CarePartner willing to play a limited role in identifying patient symptoms and psychosocial needs to reinforce self management and provide social support. Should such technology be successful, it could substantially improve the quality of life of veterans and their families during the stresses of chemotherapy without substantially increasing the cost of care.

Objectives:

1. To determine if VA patients undergoing chemotherapy who receive automated telephonic assessment and symptom management advice plus Web-based feedback to inform and engage a CarePartner report significant improvement in the number and severity of symptoms compared to patients receiving monitoring only. Secondary patient outcomes include adherence to chemotherapy, function, and utilization. 2. To determine if CarePartners receiving weekly notification of patients' symptom severity with problem solving advice through a Web-based system provide significantly more social support to patients than do control CarePartners. Secondarily, to determine if CarePartners receiving the intervention experience more caregiver burden and distress than do control CarePartners. 3. To determine whether the impacts on patients are mediated by improved general adherence and whether this association is moderated by the presence of other caregivers (besides the CarePartner) as well as patient clinical and socio-demographic characteristics. 4. To determine whether the impacts on patients are mediated by improved general adherence and whether this association is moderated by the presence of other caregivers as well as patient clinical and socio-demographic characteristics. 5. To determine whether the abovementioned impacts on CarePartners are mediated by improvements in their knowledge of patients' symptoms and mastery, and whether this association is moderated by CarePartner location (i.e. inside or outside the patient's home), presence of other caregivers, family structure, relationship quality, CarePartner socio-demographics, and geographic access to the patient.

Methods:

214 patients with solid tumors undergoing chemotherapy at 3 VA Medical Centers reporting symptoms who can identify CarePartners (who consent to enroll in the trial) will be assigned to either 10 weeks of automated telephonic symptom assessment or 10 weeks of automated telephonic symptom assessment plus symptom management advice to the patient and notification of symptom severity and problem solving advice to CarePartners. Patients and CarePartners will be surveyed at intake, 10 weeks, and 14 weeks. Both groups will receive standard oncology, hospice, and palliative care.

Status:

This project is recruiting patients. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Supportive Care


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00983892
Study type Interventional
Source VA Office of Research and Development
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date October 2010
Completion date December 2014

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