Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT03634696 |
Other study ID # |
1040841 |
Secondary ID |
R21TW010190 |
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
June 15, 2018 |
Est. completion date |
July 20, 2021 |
Study information
Verified date |
October 2021 |
Source |
MaineHealth |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
This work aims to improve late-stage cancer patients' access to high quality,
patient-centered symptom assessment and control via the creation, field test, and outcomes
assessment of a scalable mobile application (mPalliative Care Link; mPCL)-built around a
locally-validated Palliative care Outcome Scale- that links a limited pool of existing
Tanzanian palliative care specialists with patients, lay/family caregivers, and local health
workers.
Description:
The investigators hypothesize that a mobile device-based symptom assessment, control and
communication application (m-Palliative Care Link (mPCL) will extend access to palliative
care specialists (hereafter named specialists), resulting in: a) symptom control information
exchange between specialists, patients, and local health workers and b) reduced symptom
burden in late-stage cancer patients.
This hypothesis will be tested by accomplishing the following specific aims in the two-year
study period:
Aim 1. In partnership with local palliative care specialists, to design and create a secure
mobile communication application (m-Palliative Care Link; mPCL) for facilitating remote
assessment of and communication about patient symptom control needs among specialists,
patients/caregivers, and local health workers (all of whom are referred to here as user
groups). mPCL will:
- Regularly deliver the APCA POS (hereafter POS) to the cancer patient/caregiver via
mobile device; allow them to complete the outcome scale on this device; and return
responses to the specialist and local health worker for access via a secure website.
- Enable specialist POS review/action in partnership with the local health worker.
- Allow the specialist to communicate with the patient/caregiver and local health worker
regarding further symptom assessment and control based on existing standards and the
patient's desires and needs.
- Enable the specialist to generate/update patient records for ongoing review.
- Record and track symptom control as a trajectory throughout the patient's illness via
collection, storage, and analysis of POS responses.
Aim 2. To usability test an mPCL prototype through a combination of hands-on
observation/feedback and survey-based assessment of ease of use and suggestions for change
among 5-7 participants from each user group. Usability test data will be used to improve mPCL
design for subsequent field test (see Aim 3).
Aim 3. To field test and validate usability of mPCL among 45 late-stage cancer patients.
Late-stage cancer patients, who are eligible for the study, will be enrolled/consented,
trained on mPCL use, and provided with an mPCL-equipped mobile device prior to discharge from
ORCI. An mPCL record and discharge care plan will be generated by the specialist on his/her
personal computer and communicated with the patient's local health worker for review and
ongoing remote care communication and coordination. Field tests will continue for 4 months or
until patient death. Through a combination of surveys and interviews of user groups,
investigators will: determine the feasibility, acceptability, barriers, and facilitators of
mPCL for communication and action regarding symptom assessment, information exchange, and
symptom control; further optimize mPCL for ongoing study; determine the projected per patient
cost of mPCL implementation; and gather rich data on the symptom control needs of Tanzanian
cancer patients.
Aim 4. To collect preliminary data comparing field test symptom outcomes with 45 usual care
patients (ORCI palliative care clinic patients). Patients will be identified, enrolled and
consented during their scheduled outpatient clinic visit. POS responses will be collected at
the time of each clinic visit for up to 4 months. Through examination/between-group
comparisons (mPCL intervention versus usual care) of symptom-based outcomes and medication
type, dose and duration, investigators will collect preliminary data on mPCL impact that is
critical to design of a future large-scale, randomized mPCL outcomes study.