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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT03387436
Other study ID # 01GY1708
Secondary ID 01GY1708
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date December 4, 2017
Est. completion date September 1, 2020

Study information

Verified date June 2019
Source Philipps University Marburg Medical Center
Contact Carola Seifart, PD Dr. med.
Phone 0049/6421/5866156
Email carola.seifart@staff.uni-marburg.de
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

This study evaluates the effect of a collaborative advance care planning intervention on the quality of life in palliative oncological patients. Research indicates, that talking about wishes for end of life care and death, may improve the quality of life, but can be difficult for involved parties.

The intervention especially developed for this study trys to reduce psychosocial barriers that make conversations about these topics difficult. The study will measure the effect of the intervention on patients and caregivers quality of life.

The study will give additional information about implementation of advance care planning interventions in different care settings in a complex health care systems.


Description:

A high quality of end of life care and a "good death" as part of an improved patient centered care at the end of life have become important goals of palliative care. To achieve these goals, patient's preferences for end of life (EOL) care need to be known.

This study (randomized controlled trial) will evaluate effectiveness of a new type of advance care planning (ACP) intervention in different palliative care settings in Germany. The study addresses a new concept of ACP called collaborative advance care planning (cACP). This new concept is focusing on psychosocial barriers of patients and caregivers in addition to a standardized ACP process in order to reduce distress of patients and care-givers and enhance the chance of successful ACP-implementation. The main research questions are: a) Can cACP improve quality of life in palliative patients and caregivers?, b) Does cACP reduce distress in patients and caregivers and enhance consistency of end-of-life care? and c) Does cACP improve quality of end of life care and reduce utilization of health care resources? The investigators will try to answer theses research questions through a so called "randomized controlled trial" methodology. Admissible palliative cancer patients who are willing to participate in the trial will be randomly assigned to three groups. The first group will receive treatment as usual for palliative care patients. The second group will receive treatment as usual and an unspecific psychological intervention (sham-intervention). The third group will receive treatment as usual and the intervention designed for this trial. Both interventions will be equally long in duration and will be delivered by the same psychologists.

The primary outcome is the quality of life at 16 weeks measured by the internationally recognized "Functional Assessment of Cancer - General Version (FACT-G)" questionnaire. Secondary endpoints include measurements of the development of QoL over time, distress, depression, and the quantity of advance directives in the different groups.

Patients will be recruited in four different recruiting sites: a palliative care ward in an university hospital, an oncologists office, a rehabilitation clinic, and an outpatient palliative care network.

The study will recruit 90 patients in every group, 270 patients in total.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 280
Est. completion date September 1, 2020
Est. primary completion date January 1, 2020
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Patient > 18 years

- Patient with advance cancer in palliative setting

- positive surprise question: the physician will not be surprised, if the patient died in the next 12 month

- Patient is willing to take part in the study

Exclusion Criteria:

- Patients life expectancy below 3 month (estimated by physician)

- Patients ECOG-status is > 3

- Patient is not able to speak German

- Patient is incapacitated to give informed consent

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Behavioral:
Sham-Intervention
The sham intervention does not target the specific topics of the study intervention group (i.e. no special focus an ACP or end of life communication). Supportive therapy uses common factors of psychotherapy such as elicitation of affect, reflective listening, and feeling understood, but provides no explicit theoretical formulation to the patient. The therapist tries to elicit and validate the patients' affect for instance on the realization that there is no curative treatment option. Supportive therapy has been used as an unspecific control condition in several studies (Cohen et al. 2011; Markowitz et al. 1998). Patients of the sham intervention will be informed about the benefits of advance directives in general.
Study-Intervention
The design of the study-intervention was influenced by dignity therapy (Chochinov et al. 2005), the End-of-life-Review (Ando et al. 2010) and barriers concerning participation of ACP identified by research (Bollig et al. 2017; Gjerberg et al. 2015). It is the goal of the study-intervention to enhance communication about death related topics of patients and their relatives/caregivers. Our study intervention extends over six therapeutic sessions. The length of each session will be adjusted to the patients physical condition, it should not exceed 45 minutes in total. In the first four sessions, patients and relatives will be informed about the relevance of ACP. Potential barriers for an efficient patient-caregiver communication and ACP are discussed. The intervention focuses on encouraging end-of-life communication and on jointly modifying barriers to EOL communication. The fifth and sixth session focus on ACP based on the standardised concept of "beizeiten begleiten".

Locations

Country Name City State
Germany Philipps University Marburg
Germany Philipps University, Departement of Psychology, Division of Clinical Psychology and Psychtherapy Marburg

Sponsors (4)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
PD. Dr. med. Carola Seifart Department of Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, Philipps University Marburg Medical Center

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Germany, 

References & Publications (17)

Ando M, Morita T, Akechi T, Okamoto T; Japanese Task Force for Spiritual Care. Efficacy of short-term life-review interviews on the spiritual well-being of terminally ill cancer patients. J Pain Symptom Manage. 2010 Jun;39(6):993-1002. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2009.11.320. — View Citation

Bollig G, Rosland JH, Gjengedal E, Schmidt G, May AT, Heller A. A European multicenter study on systematic ethics work in nursing homes. Scand J Caring Sci. 2017 Sep;31(3):587-601. doi: 10.1111/scs.12373. Epub 2016 Aug 26. — View Citation

Cella DF, Tulsky DS, Gray G, Sarafian B, Linn E, Bonomi A, Silberman M, Yellen SB, Winicour P, Brannon J, et al. The Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy scale: development and validation of the general measure. J Clin Oncol. 1993 Mar;11(3):570-9. — View Citation

Chochinov HM, Hack T, Hassard T, Kristjanson LJ, McClement S, Harlos M. Dignity therapy: a novel psychotherapeutic intervention for patients near the end of life. J Clin Oncol. 2005 Aug 20;23(24):5520-5. — View Citation

Cohen L, Parker PA, Vence L, Savary C, Kentor D, Pettaway C, Babaian R, Pisters L, Miles B, Wei Q, Wiltz L, Patel T, Radvanyi L. Presurgical stress management improves postoperative immune function in men with prostate cancer undergoing radical prostatectomy. Psychosom Med. 2011 Apr;73(3):218-25. doi: 10.1097/PSY.0b013e31820a1c26. Epub 2011 Jan 21. — View Citation

Heckel M, Bussmann S, Stiel S, Weber M, Ostgathe C. Validation of the German Version of the Quality of Dying and Death Questionnaire for Informal Caregivers (QODD-D-Ang). J Pain Symptom Manage. 2015 Sep;50(3):402-13. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2015.03.020. Epub 2015 Jun 14. — View Citation

Kroenke K, Spitzer RL, Williams JB. The PHQ-9: validity of a brief depression severity measure. J Gen Intern Med. 2001 Sep;16(9):606-13. — View Citation

Lumbeck, Gudrun; Brandstätter, Monika; Geissner, Edgar (2012): Erstvalidierung der deutschen Version des "Inventory of Complicated Grief" (ICG-D). In: Zeitschrift für Klinische Psychologie und Psychotherapie 41 (4), p. 243-248.

Mack JW, Nilsson M, Balboni T, Friedlander RJ, Block SD, Trice E, Prigerson HG. Peace, Equanimity, and Acceptance in the Cancer Experience (PEACE): validation of a scale to assess acceptance and struggle with terminal illness. Cancer. 2008 Jun;112(11):2509-17. doi: 10.1002/cncr.23476. — View Citation

Markowitz JC, Kocsis JH, Fishman B, Spielman LA, Jacobsberg LB, Frances AJ, Klerman GL, Perry SW. Treatment of depressive symptoms in human immunodeficiency virus-positive patients. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1998 May;55(5):452-7. — View Citation

Mehnert, Anja; Müller, Diana; Lehmann, Claudia; Koch, Uwe (2006): Die deutsche Version des NCCN Distress-Thermometers. In: Zeitschrift für Psychiatrie, Psychologie und Psychotherapie 54 (3), S. 213-223. DOI: 10.1024/1661-4747.54.3.213.

Miller DC, Sanda MG, Dunn RL, Montie JE, Pimentel H, Sandler HM, McLaughlin WP, Wei JT. Long-term outcomes among localized prostate cancer survivors: health-related quality-of-life changes after radical prostatectomy, external radiation, and brachytherapy. J Clin Oncol. 2005 Apr 20;23(12):2772-80. — View Citation

Prigerson HG, Maciejewski PK, Reynolds CF 3rd, Bierhals AJ, Newsom JT, Fasiczka A, Frank E, Doman J, Miller M. Inventory of Complicated Grief: a scale to measure maladaptive symptoms of loss. Psychiatry Res. 1995 Nov 29;59(1-2):65-79. — View Citation

Ware J Jr, Kosinski M, Keller SD. A 12-Item Short-Form Health Survey: construction of scales and preliminary tests of reliability and validity. Med Care. 1996 Mar;34(3):220-33. — View Citation

Weitzner MA, Jacobsen PB, Wagner H Jr, Friedland J, Cox C. The Caregiver Quality of Life Index-Cancer (CQOLC) scale: development and validation of an instrument to measure quality of life of the family caregiver of patients with cancer. Qual Life Res. 1999;8(1-2):55-63. — View Citation

Weitzner MA, McMillan SC. The Caregiver Quality of Life Index-Cancer (CQOLC) Scale: revalidation in a home hospice setting. J Palliat Care. 1999 Summer;15(2):13-20. — View Citation

Zeng L, Bedard G, Cella D, Thavarajah N, Chen E, Zhang L, Bennett M, Peckham K, De Costa S, Beaumont JL, Tsao M, Danjoux C, Barnes E, Sahgal A, Chow E. Preliminary results of the generation of a shortened quality-of-life assessment for patients with advanced cancer: the FACIT-Pal-14. J Palliat Med. 2013 May;16(5):509-15. doi: 10.1089/jpm.2012.0595. Epub 2013 Apr 16. — View Citation

* Note: There are 17 references in allClick here to view all references

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary The Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy scale (FACT-G; Cella, Tulsky, Gray, et al., 1993) Quality of life (QOL). Self-rating measurement; four subscales: physical well-being (7-items, score range 0-28), social/ family well-being (7-items, score range 0-28), emotional well being (6-items, score range 0-24) and functional well being (7-items, score range 0-28), one total score (sum of the four subscale scores; score range of 0-108). Higher subscale and total scores indicate better QoL. 60 weeks; Baseline, 8 weeks (after randomisation: a.r.), 16 weeks (a. r.); every two month for the following 8 month or till death (if occuring within one year after randomisation)
Secondary 12-Item Short Form Health Survey (SF-12; Ware, Kosinski, Keller, 1996) QOL of patients. Two subscales of health related quality of life (QOL): physical health and mental health (score range:0-100). Higher scores indicate better QoL. 60 weeks; Baseline, 8 weeks (after randomisation: a.r.), 16 weeks (a. r.); every two month for the following 8 month or till death (if occuring within one year after randomisation)
Secondary Functional assessment of chronic illness therapy - palliative care- 14 items (FACIT-Pal-14; Zeng et al. 2014) QoL of palliative care patients. A higher score indicate better QoL. 60 weeks; Baseline, 8 weeks (after randomisation: a.r.), 16 weeks (a. r.); every two month for the following 8 months or till death (if occuring one year after randomisation)
Secondary National Comprehensive Cancer Network Distress Thermometer (Mehnert et al. 2006) scale from 0 to 10 assessing overall psycho social distress, was specifically developed for oncological patients. 16 weeks; Baseline, 8 weeks (after randomisation: a.r.), 16 weeks (a. r.)
Secondary Peace, Equanimity, and Acceptance in the Cancer Experience (PEACE-Scale, Mack et al. 2008) The scale was developed to assess the acceptance of the disease and the inner peace of patients.
12 items, two subscales: inner acceptance of disease (score 0-20 high number indicating high acceptance), inner conflict with disease (score 0-28 high score indicating more conflict)
16 weeks; Baseline, 8 weeks (after randomisation: a.r.), 16 weeks (a. r.)
Secondary Barriers of communication (patients) This self developed questionnaire will try to assess the barriers of communication of patients and caregivers concerning topics like end of life care and death.
25 items, 6 point likert scale. High score indicating low barriers of communication (some reverse scored items). The scale will be validated in the study.
8 weeks; Baseline, 8 weeks (after randomisation: a.r.)
Secondary Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9; Kroenke et al. 2001) Assesses severe symptoms of depression based on criteria by the DSM IV. 9 items, sumscore (0-27), a high sumscore indicates a high level of depression 16 weeks; Baseline, 8 weeks (after randomisation: a.r.), 16 weeks (a. r.)
Secondary Expectations about treatment of patients (self-developed, visual analogues scale) These three self-developed items assess descriptive 1. the expectations patients have towards their cancer therapy (e.g. prolonging of life, improvement of QoL) and 2. the importance of prolonging of life & improvement of QoL (two visual analogues scales) 16 weeks; Baseline, 16 weeks (a. r.)
Secondary Existence of ACP directive Patients will be asked, if they have completed and advance healthcare directive or took part in an ACP-process. Purely descriptive (Advance directive yes vs. no) 60 weeks; Baseline, 8 weeks (after randomisation: a.r.), 16 weeks (a. r.); 1 year (a.r.) or after death (if occuring one year a. r.)
Secondary Caregiver Quality of Life Index - Cancer Scale (CQOLC; Weitzner et al., 1999) Assessment of cancer caregivers QoL and has been validated in curative and palliative settings.
34 items, 5 point likert scale, high score indicating low QoL (some items reverse scoreed)
60 weeks; Baseline, 8 weeks (after randomisation: a.r.), 16 weeks (a. r.); 1 year (a.r.) or after death of patient (if occuring one year a. r.)
Secondary 12-Item Short Form Health Survey (SF-12; Ware, Kosinski & Keller,1996) QOL of caregivers. Two subscales of health related quality of life (QOL): physical health and mental health (score range:0-100). Higher scores indicate better QoL. 60 weeks; Baseline, 8 weeks (after randomisation: a.r.), 16 weeks (a. r.); 1 year (a.r.) or after death of patient (if occuring one year a. r.)
Secondary Patient Health Questionnaire - (PHQ-9; Kroenke et al., 2002) Depression of caregivers. Assesses severe symptoms of depression based on criteria by the DSM IV.
9 items, sumscore (range 0-27), a high sumscore indicates a high level of depression
Baseline
Secondary Quality of Dying and Death Questionnaire for Informal Caregivers (QODD-D-Ang; Heckel et al. 2015) The QODD-questionnaire (Qualitiy of dying and death) assesses the quality of the deceasing phase from a caregivers perspective.QODD-D-Ang total score (sumscore range 0-100); higher scores indicate better Quality of dying and death. 4-8 weeks after death of patient (if occuring within one year after randomisation)
Secondary Barriers of communication (caregiver) This self developed questionnaire will try to assess the barriers of communication of patients and caregivers concerning topics like end of life care and death. The scale will be validated in the study. Higher scores indicate more barriers of communication. 8 weeks; Baseline, 8 weeks (after randomisation: a.r.),
Secondary Expectations about treatment of patients (self-developed, visual analogues scales) These three self-developed items assess descriptive 1. the expectations caregivers have towards their relatives cancer therapy (e.g. prolonging of life, improvement of QoL) and 2. the importance of prolonging of life & improvement of QoL (two visual analogues scales) 16 weeks; Baseline, 16 weeks (a. r.)
Secondary Inventory of Complicated Grief (Lumbeck, Brandstätter, & Geissner, 2013; Prigerson et al., 1995) Complicated grief, 19 items, sumscore (0-76, cut-off >25) 4-8 weeks after death of patient (if occuring within one year after randomisation)
Secondary Existence of ACP directive Caregivers will be asked, if the patient has completed and advance healthcare directive or took part in an ACP-process. Purely descriptive (Advance directive yes vs. no) 4-8 weeks after death of patient (if occuring within one year after randomisation)
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