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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT05241717
Other study ID # HREBA.CC-21-0272
Secondary ID
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date June 2022
Est. completion date December 2023

Study information

Verified date May 2022
Source University of Calgary
Contact Fiona Schulte, PhD
Phone 403-698-8103
Email fsmschul@ucalgary.ca
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Background: There are over 500,000 survivors of childhood cancer in North America alone. One in four survivors experiences chronic pain after treatment has completed. Youth with chronic pain report increased anxiety, depression, activity limitations, and sleep disturbances. An 8-week web-based cognitive-behavioral treatment for chronic pain (WebMAP) has demonstrated reduction in the pain in children but has not yet been explored in survivors. The objectives of the current study are to (1) test the feasibility and acceptability of WebMAP for a sample of survivors with chronic pain and their parents, (2) assess the acceptability of WebMAP using qualitative interviews, (3) assess WebMAP's effect on activity limitations, pain intensity, depression and anxiety symptoms, and sleep disturbances, and (4) assess WebMAP's effect on parent pain catastrophizing and parental response to their child's pain. Methods: A single-arm mixed-methods pre-post intervention study design will be utilized. Participants will be 34 survivors and at least one of their parents/caregivers. Inclusion criteria are (1) cancer history (2) current age 11-17 years, (3) >2 years post-treatment or >5 years post-diagnosis, (4) pain present over prior 3 months impairing >1 area of daily life and occurring >1/month , (5) computer access with broadband internet. Survivors will complete a pre-treatment questionnaire, which will include: Child Activity Limitations Interview, the pain intensity Numerical Rating Scale, PROMIS - and Pain Interference, Anxiety, Depression, and Adolescent Sleep Wake Scale. Parents will complete the Pain Catastrophizing Scale - Parent Version and the Adult Responses to Child Symptoms. Upon completion of pre-treatment questionnaires (T0), survivors will begin WebMAP. After the 8 week intervention, survivors will complete the same measures (T1), and at 3 month follow-up (T2). Post-treatment interviews will be conducted to determine acceptability. Feasibility will be assessed via recruitment and retention rates. Treatment engagement will be measured by number of modules completed. Pre-post outcome data will be assessed using Linear Mixed Models. Qualitative data will be analyzed using thematic analysis. Patient and caregiver partners will be involved in study design, recruitment, interpretation of results, and knowledge translation. Discussion: Investigating whether WebMAP is useful to survivors will be an important step in improving pain management in this population.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 38
Est. completion date December 2023
Est. primary completion date July 2023
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 11 Years to 17 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - history of any cancer diagnosis - current age 11-17 years - at least 2 years post-treatment or completed treatment and at least 5 years post-diagnosis - pain present over prior 3 months that impairs at least one area of daily life and occurs at least 1/month - computer access and literacy Exclusion Criteria: - not able to read/understand English - developmental delays that would prevent them from completing the survey themselves or complete the intervention - psychosis

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Behavioral:
Web-based Management of Adolescent Pain (WebMAP)
Participants will be asked to complete one module per week, which are approximately 20 minutes in length. Survivors and parents will be asked to spend approximately 4.5 hours each over the course of the intervention on WebMAP including 4 hours to complete the modules and 30 minutes total corresponding with a coach. Each week, patients log into WebMAP to learn a new skill and practice that skill for 1 week to allow time for skills acquisition. WebMAP consists of two separate, password-protected programs including one for adolescents and one for parents (http://webmap2.com).

Locations

Country Name City State
Canada Alberta Children's Hospital Calgary Alberta

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Calgary

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Canada, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Feasibility assessed by the number of participants recruited The number of participants recruited for the study will be part of the assessment of the feasibility of the trial. 1 year
Primary Feasibility assessed by participant retention The number of participants who complete the study will be part of the assessment of the feasibility of the trial. 1 year
Primary Feasibility assessed by treatment adherence The number of participants who complete at least 6 of the 8 modules of the intervention will be part of the assessment of the feasibility of the trial. 1 year
Primary Acceptability of intervention assessed by a satisfaction survey A survey including open-ended questions will be created with patient partners to elicit feedback on specific modules. These questions will ask about what information was helpful and what may need to be adjusted to better serve youth with a history of cancer for both patients and parents. The satisfaction survey will be completed as part of the post-treatment questionnaire. 3 months after the intervention
Primary Feasibility, acceptability and satisfaction assessed by qualitative interviews Semi-structured interviews will be conducted with survivors upon treatment completion to assess feasibility, acceptability, and satisfaction with the program. Patient partners will be involved in creating the standard set of questions. Immediately after the intervention
Primary Satisfaction with intervention modules assessed by a satisfaction survey A survey including open-ended questions will be created with patient partners to elicit feedback on specific modules. These questions will ask about what information was helpful and what may need to be adjusted to better serve youth with a history of cancer for both patients and parents. The satisfaction survey will be completed as part of the post-treatment questionnaire. 3 months after the intervention
Secondary Pain intensity assessed by a pain rating Daily surveys, administered through REDCap, will be used to assess daily presence of pain and pain intensity for 7 days at each assessment period. Pain intensity will be assessed with an item asking about the magnitude of pain experienced answered on an 11-point numerical rating scale (0 = no pain, 10 = worst pain). This measure of pain intensity has demonstrated to be a reliable and valid measure of pain in many populations of children 8 years and older (Baeyer et al., 2009; Castarlenas, Jensen, Baeyer, & Miro, 2017), but has not yet been validated in people with cancer. Baseline, immediatly after the intervention, 3 months after the intervention
Secondary Activity Limitations assessed by the Child Activity Limitations Interview The Child Activity Limitations Interview is a measure of children's perceived difficulty in completing typical daily activities because of pain. The CALI will be collected for 1 week at each of the study timepoints. Survivors will choose the top 8 activities from a list of 21 and will be asked each day whether the activity occurred and how difficult the activity was to perform because of their pain. Difficulty ratings are measures on a five-point scale (0 = no difficulty, 4 = extremely difficult), with a range of zero to 32. Higher scores indicate greater functional limitations. Average daily limitation scores across each assessment period will be computed. Baseline, immediatly after the intervention, 3 months after the intervention
Secondary Anxiety and depressive symptoms and pain interference assessed by Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) measures The PROMIS Anxiety and Depression instruments (Cook, Reeve, Ader, & Fries, 2010(31)) (8-item short form) will be administered via REDCap to screen for current symptoms of anxiety and depression. Survivors will complete the self-report instrument corresponding to their age (child: age 8-17; adult: age 18+). Items (e.g., "I felt worried") are rated on a five-point scale (1 = never, 5 = always). Higher scores signify greater severity of symptoms. Pain interference will be assessed using the four-item PROMIS interference scale for survivors 8-17 years of age, and the seven-item PROMIS interference scale for survivors over 18 years of age (Hinds et al., 2013). The PROMIS pediatric measures have been validated for use in pediatric oncology (Hinds et al., 2013). Baseline, immediatly after the intervention, 3 months after the intervention
Secondary Sleep quality assessed by the Adolescent Sleep Wake Scale The Adolescent Sleep Wake Scale (ASWS-S) (32, 33) is a measure of the subjective perception of sleep quality. The ASWS-S is a 10-item measure where items representing symptoms of sleep disturbance are scored on a 6-point Likert scale (1 = always, 6 = never), and will be administered online via REDCap. The measure produces a total sum score where higher scores represent more severe sleep disturbance. The ASWS has demonstrated acceptable reliability and validity among populations of youth with comorbid sleep and medical conditions (34) and among ethnically diverse youth (33). Baseline, immediatly after the intervention, 3 months after the intervention
Secondary Catastrophizing about child's pain assessed by the Pain Catastrophizing Scale-Parent Version The Pain Catastrophizing Scale - Parent Version (PCS-P) (37) is a 13-item measure used to assess parents' catastrophic thoughts and feelings about their child's pain and will be administered online via REDCap. Parents rate statements about their child's pain on a five-point Likert scale (i.e., "When my child has pain, I can't keep it out of my mind"). Items are summed to yield a total score and can also be summed to provide scores on three subscales: rumination, magnification, and helplessness. Lower scores indicate less catastrophizing. This scale has been found to have good reliability in parents with children who experience pain. Baseline, immediatly after the intervention, 3 months after the intervention
Secondary Parental responses to child's pain behaviors assessed by the Adult Responses to Children's Symptoms The Adult Responses to Children's Symptoms (ARCS) (38, 39) measures parental responses to their child's pain behaviors and will be administered online via REDCap. The current study will only utilize the Protect subscale, which assesses parents' responses that either positively or negatively reinforce pain complaints. Parents' responses are rated on a five-point scale (0 = never, 4 = always). Subscale scores represent an average of the items, with higher scores indicating more frequent use of that behavioral style. This scale has demonstrated reliability and validity for use with parents of children with chronic pain (38, 39). Baseline, immediatly after the intervention, 3 months after the intervention
Secondary Parent distress assessed by the Kessler Psychological Distress Scale The Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (40) is a 6-item measure used to assess non-specific psychological distress representing diagnoses of major depression and generalized anxiety disorder and also contains a positive affect domain. The measure has good precision in the 90-99th percentile range of the population, and has solid psychometric properties across major sociodemographic populations distribution in the United States of America and Canada (40). It also strongly discriminates between meeting and not meeting diagnostic thresholds for psychological disorders (40). Baseline, immediatly after the intervention, 3 months after the intervention
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