Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The formation of a colostomy following surgery for rectal cancer changes body image, challenges patient practical skills and threatens quality of life. As the oncological results have improved over the last decades the number of survivors from rectal cancer who have to adjust to a cancer free life in their own homes is increasing. To enable the identification of the patients with stoma-related reduced health-related Quality of life (HRQoL) in a quick and reliable way we recently developed the Colostomy Impact Score (CI-score) comprising 7 items of stoma related factors with significant impact on HRQoL. The purpose of the present project is to perform an international validation of the CI-score and to demonstrate its applicability. The construct validity of the CI-score will be studied internationally on crosssectional cohorts of patients with permanent colostomy after abdominoperineal excision (APE) or Hartmann's procedure in Denmark, Sweden, Spain, the Netherlands, United Kingdom, Turkey, Brazil, Egypt, Russia, Lithuania, Israel, Portugal, South Africa, Australia and China. This will be done by testing the CI-score against five anchor questions stoma impact on HRQoL, the 5 Level version og the EuroQol measuer (EQ-5D-5L) and version 3.0 of the Quality of Life Questionnaire from the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC QLQ C30 questionnaire v3.0). The impact of the challenges related to having a stoma may vary with different demographic, socioeconomic and cultural factors. Supplementary data on stoma care, demographics and socioeconomic status will be gathered to study the impact of patient-related factors and cultural differences on HRQoL in rectal cancer survivors with an ostomy.


Clinical Trial Description

This retrospective cohort study has three main aims: 1) To identify demographic and socioeconomic factors influencing stoma impact and HRQoL, 2) To asses reliability and to validate the translated and cross-cultural adapted CI score internationally in multiple different centres, across a variety of patient groups and across cultural, religious, socioeconomic and physical borders and 3) To investigate if differences in everyday stoma care and -costs across countries and cultures affect CI or HRQoL. International validation will be conducted as a retrospective cohort study on patients with a permanent colostomy after curative intended surgery more than 12 months prior to inclusion. Local health care professionals will identify includable patients and register relevant clinical information on each patient from the hospital chart. Most centres will include patients from national or regional databases, some will however include conveniently if a database is not available. Our international collaborators will be responsible for sending out and collecting the questionnaires and returning the completed questionnaires to the undersigned. In countries with sufficient internet accessibility and -infrastructure the data collection will be web based i.e. patients are sent a link to the redcap-database for them to enter their answers directly. Some centres will employ paper versions of the questionnaires. In areas with substantial number of illiterates investigator led interviews can be performed. As the CI-score is a construct based on a formative model, statistical analysis based on the Classical Test Theory(CCT) and Item Response Theory (IRT) cannot be applied. However, the following aspects of validity and reliability from the Consensus-based Standards for the selection of health Measurement Instruments (COSMIN) checklist15-17 can and will be evaluated: Content validity: Comprehensiveness and relevance of the questions in the CI-score have been ensured with the way of the development of the CI-score with the starting point in a Basic Stoma Questionnaire developed by an expert group supplemented by patients ensuring that all possible factors affecting stoma function/impact was included before regression analysis lead to the seven weighed questions1. After translation and cross-cultural adaptation face-validity of each translated CI-score will be assessed again by the collaborators before inclusion of patients. Construct validity: This will be tested with hypothesis-testing. Hypotheses regarding mean differences and expected correlations between scores of instruments are formulated a priori. Hypotheses on how the CI-score and HRQoL are related to other factors are formulated a priori. For convergent validation the CI-score will be tested against 5 anchor questions (not validated) and the EORTC QLQ C30+ the colorectal specific CR29 (validated). Cross-cultural validity: See translation section. Reliability: For a randomly selected subgroup in each country the CI-score and anchor question will be administered twice with an interval of approximately 2 weeks. The two administrations will be independent and both the setting when answering and the forms of administration will be similar for the individual patient. For ensuring stable patients an extra question on recent changes in stoma function will be added to the retest. Translation of the CI-score will be managed by the lead institution with few exceptions (Turkey, Russia, Israel) and will follow the translation procedure recommended by the World Health Organization. All translations are produced by a forward-backward procedure. The latter procedure is performed to ensure, that the original meaning of the concepts is derived. The original Danish version of the CI-score has already undergone a professional translation to English. A professional translation agency will perform the translation of the English version to languages in the included countries. All questionnaires/Case Report Forms (CRF) to be filled in by patients will undergo the same translation procedure as above. A master version of the questionnaires will be collected into a booklet. On this basis, a RedCap database will be constructed to allow for direct electronic data entry by patients. Patient not able to access the web-based system, will fill in a paper version of the booklet. According to variation between populations in respect to practically illiterate's investigator lead data collection will be allowed. However, this should be agreed by the local investigation and the steering group in the planning of the data collection and included as individual amendment to the final protocol. Data analysis: Construct validity: Convergent validity will be studied by testing the CI-score on APE/Hartmann-patients against two measures of HRQoL; the anchor-questions assessing the overall stoma-impact on HRQoL, the EORTC QLQ C30 questionnaire version 3.0 and the EORTC QLQ CR29. Construct validity will furthermore be assessed by hypothesis-testing assessing the direction and magnitude of the expected correlations. Test-retest reliability will be studied on a subgroup in all included countries. Also, we will include questions on background demographics, socioeconomic status, everyday stoma care and -costs thereby enabling investigation of the practical and economic aspect of living with a stoma varying from country to country. Statistical analysis: Statistical analysis will be performed separately for each country. The correlations between total CI-score, anchor questions and the EORTC questionnaire results will be calculated for all participating patients according to the guidelines for the scores. For each CI-score group (minor CI/major CI) the mean EORTC QLQ C30-score will be calculated, testing the overall difference of impact on HRQoL between the CI-score groups. Using the anchor-questions, the patients are divided into two HRQoL groups of those reporting no/minor or some/major impact on HRQoL. Relationship between CI-score and HRQoL group will be illustrated in box-plot for each country, where we expect statistically significant differences in median CI-score between the two HRQoL groups. Differences will be tested by Mann-Whitney U test. A contingency 2 by 2 table will be used to assess the degree of agreement between the two CI-score groups and the two HRQoL groups. Based on this, the sensitivity for the score will be calculated for each country. The added questions about irrigation and stoma-bag change frequency will be compared country-wise. Univariate regression analysis, descriptive analysis and estimation of impact on HRQoL will be performed. Test-retest reliability will be evaluated using Intraclass Correlation Coefficient and Cohens' Kappa. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03516916
Study type Observational [Patient Registry]
Source Aarhus University Hospital
Contact
Status Enrolling by invitation
Phase
Start date February 1, 2019
Completion date December 31, 2020

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Active, not recruiting NCT05559255 - Changes in Pain, Spasticity, and Quality of Life After Use of Counterstrain Treatment in Individuals With SCI N/A
Completed NCT06238557 - Prospective Evaluation of Psychological Consequences and Impact on Long-term Quality of Life
Recruiting NCT05563805 - Exploring Virtual Reality Adventure Training Exergaming N/A
Completed NCT05472935 - Asynchronous Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction to Reduce Burnout in Licensed Clinical Social Workers N/A
Recruiting NCT04444544 - Quality of Life and High-Risk Abdominal Cancer Surgery
Completed NCT04281953 - Impact on Quality of Life of Long-term Ototoxicity in Cancer Survivors
Recruiting NCT05546931 - Mobile Health Program for Rural Hypertension N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT04746664 - Effects of Nutrition Counselling on Old Age People's Nutritional Status and Quality of Life in Bahir Dar City, North West Ethiopia N/A
Completed NCT05387174 - Nursing Intervention in Two Risk Factors of the Metabolic Syndrome and Quality of Life in the Climacteric Period N/A
Recruiting NCT04142827 - The Effect of Long Term Therapy With High Flow Humidification Compared to Usual Care in Patients With Bronchiectasis (BX) N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05903638 - A Pilot RCT: the Impact of a Virtual MBSR Course on Women With Primary Infertility N/A
Completed NCT05538455 - Investigating ProCare4Life Impact on Quality of Life of Elderly Subjects With Neurodegenerative Diseases N/A
Completed NCT06216015 - Exercise Training and Kidney Transplantation N/A
Completed NCT03813420 - Sleep Quality of Physiotherapy Students Quality of Life and Physical Activity Level N/A
Recruiting NCT05550545 - Infant RSV Infections and Health-related Quality of Life of Families
Completed NCT05346588 - THRIVE Feasibility Trial Phase 3
Recruiting NCT05233020 - Robotic Versus Hybrid Assisted Ventral Hernia Repair N/A
Terminated NCT03304184 - The Role of Biodentine in Class V Dental Lesions on Oral Health Related Quality of Life Phase 3
Completed NCT05063305 - Probiotics, Immunity, Stress, and QofL N/A
Recruiting NCT05380856 - Sacral Neuromodulation for Neurogenic Lower Urinary Tract, Bowel and Sexual Dysfunction N/A