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Clinical Trial Summary

There is strong evidence that exercise can help improve physical and mental wellbeing after treatment for cancer. However, at present, people with cancer in Ireland are not given the opportunity to have an individual assessment of their physical and psychological wellbeing as part of standard care and are not routinely prescribed exercise-based rehabilitation. The researchers will run and evaluate a system to i. assess physical and psychological wellbeing of people who have completed cancer treatment, ii. apply a rehabilitation triage system, based on findings of the assessment, iii. refer participants to one of three rehabilitation pathways, as per outcome of the triage process. Rehabilitation pathways are as follows: 1. Participants who are currently active and have no cancer-specific impairments will receive advice from the physiotherapist on maintaining their current levels of activity. 2. Participants who are not active and have no cancer-specific impairments will be referred to a suitable community-based exercise programme. This programme must contain both resistance and aerobic training and should have some level of supervision from a fitness professional. 3. Participants who are not active and have ongoing cancer-specific impairments will be referred to an oncology specialist physiotherapist, funded through this work, at St James's Hospital for assessment and treatment. All participants will be encouraged to visit www.cancerrehabilitation.ie for information through out the study. Participants will be reassessed 12 weeks after the initial assessment. The implementation of this system will be evaluated using the RE-AIM framework.


Clinical Trial Description

Background During and following treatment for cancer, people can experience negative side-effects of treatment, including loss of fitness, weakness, fatigue and psychological issues such as depression and anxiety. There is strong evidence that exercise can help improve these symptoms. The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic means that many people who had cancer treatment since March 2020 may need additional support to achieve optimum physical and psychological wellbeing. At present, people with cancer in Ireland are not given the opportunity to have an individual assessment of their physical and psychological wellbeing as part of standard care and are not routinely prescribed exercise-based rehabilitation. Aim To run and evaluate an exercise-based rehabilitation triage and assessment clinic for people who had cancer treatment since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. Study Design: Patients who were diagnosed with cancer in St James Hospital since March 2020 will be invited to participate in the study. Participants will attend an appointment with a physiotherapist, who will assess their physical and mental wellbeing. On the basis of the assessment findings, participants will be assigned to one of three categories, which will determine their ongoing rehabilitation plan. The three categories are as follows: 1. Participants who are currently active and have no cancer-specific impairments will receive advice from the physiotherapist on maintaining their current levels of activity. 2. Participants who are not active and have no cancer-specific impairments will be referred to a suitable community-based exercise programme. This programme must contain both resistance and aerobic training and should have some level of supervision from a fitness professional. 3. Participants who are not active and have ongoing cancer-specific impairments will be referred to an oncology specialist physiotherapist, funded through this work, at St James's Hospital for assessment and treatment. All participants will also be advised to visit a website designed by the PERCS research group through a co-design process with patient representatives (www.cancerrehabilitation.ie.) Participants will receive a follow-up phone call one week after the first assessment and will then be re-assessed 12 weeks after the first assessment. A further follow-up phone call will be conducted, if the PERCS research team feel it is needed. The assessment and triage clinic will be assessed using a framework for evaluating intervention; this will look at how the intervention was implemented and how it will best operate in future practice. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05615285
Study type Interventional
Source University of Dublin, Trinity College
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date December 12, 2022
Completion date October 31, 2023

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