Outcome
Type |
Measure |
Description |
Time frame |
Safety issue |
Primary |
Requirement of patients included in 7-week curative radio(chemo)therapy for a (dose-escalation of) strong opioid |
Through pain diary, weekly visit by doctor and research assistant, the need for (dose-escalation of) strong opioid will be assessed. |
Continuous monitoring from patient enrollment until week 7 or date of requiring a (dose-escalation of) strong opioid if this occurs before week 7 (end of radio(chemo)therapy) |
|
Secondary |
Pain prevalence, prevalence of opioid use within HNCA patients |
Through pain diary, weekly visit by doctor and research assistant, patients will be asked to rate their pain |
Daily, weekly and assessed at visit 1 (moment of inclusion), visit 2 (anticipated week 5), visit 3 (end of radio(chemo)therapy), and week 24 (follow-up) |
|
Secondary |
Maintenance or amelioration of pain within subtypes measured by the 0-10 numeric visual analogue pain rating scale. |
Pain assessment of subtypes of patients, according to their tumour location, through the 0-10 numeric visual analogue pain rating scale. This scale is a tool to measure the pain of patients, with a score of 0 if the patient has no pain, a score of 5 if the patient has moderate pain and a score of 10 if the patient copes with the worst possible pain. So higher values represent worse pain. |
Daily, weekly and assessed at visit 1 (moment of inclusion), visit 2 (anticipated week 5), visit 3 (end of radio(chemo)therapy), and week 24 (follow-up) |
|
Secondary |
Maintenance or amelioration of pain within subtypes measured by the Neuropathic Pain Scale |
Pain assessment of subtypes of patients, according to their tumour location, through the Neuropathic Pain Scale. Patients give a score between 0 until 10 on different aspects of pain as pain sharpness, heat/cold, dullness, intensity, unpleasantness, and surface vs. deep pain which all represent the subtypes of the Neuropathic Pain Scale. A score between 0 and 10 will be assigned to these different subtypes of pain, with a score of 0 if the patient has no pain, a score of 5 if the patient has moderate pain and a score of 10 if the patient copes with the worst possible pain. So higher values represent worse pain. The scores on all these subscales are not combined as we are interested in the subtypes of pain themselves. |
Daily, weekly and assessed at visit 1 (moment of inclusion), visit 2 (anticipated week 5), visit 3 (end of radio(chemo)therapy), and week 24 (follow-up) |
|
Secondary |
Maintenance or amelioration of pain within subtypes measured by the Brief Pain Inventory (Short Form). |
Pain assessment of subtypes of patients, according to their tumour location, through the Brief Pain Inventory (Short Form). |
Daily, weekly and assessed at visit 1 (moment of inclusion), visit 2 (anticipated week 5), visit 3 (end of radio(chemo)therapy), and week 24 (follow-up) |
|
Secondary |
Effect on treatment-related toxicity (mucositis, dysphagia, fatigue, weight loss) |
Treatment-related toxicities will be scored by the local physician |
Continuous monitoring from patient enrollment until week 7 or date of requiring a (dose-escalation of) strong opioid if this occurs before week 7 (end of radio(chemo)therapy) |
|
Secondary |
Effect on hospitalisation requirement |
Effect on hospitalisation will be assessed by the local physician and the research assistant |
Continuous monitoring from patient enrollment until week 7 or date of requiring a (dose-escalation of) strong opioid if this occurs before week 7 (end of radio(chemo)therapy) |
|
Secondary |
Effect on percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy tube placement |
Effect on the placement of percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy tube will be assessed by the local physician and research assistant |
Continuous monitoring from patient enrollment until week 7 or date of requiring a (dose-escalation of) strong opioid if this occurs before week 7 (end of radio(chemo)therapy) |
|
Secondary |
Difference in dose of opioids needed for pain relief between the experimental and control group |
Monitoring of opioid therapy until primary endpoint |
Continuous monitoring from patient enrollment until week 7 or date of requiring a (dose-escalation of) strong opioid if this occurs before week 7 (end of radio(chemo)therapy) |
|
Secondary |
Effect on quality of life, and sleep quality in specific, of head and neck cancer patients assessed by EORTC QLQ C30 |
Measured by EORTC QLQ C30 |
Visit 1 (moment of inclusion), visit 2 (anticipated week 5), visit 3 (end of radio(chemo)therapy), and week 24 (follow-up) |
|
Secondary |
Effect on quality of life, and sleep quality in specific, of head and neck cancer patients assessed by HN35 Questionnaires |
Measured by HN35 Questionnaires |
Visit 1 (moment of inclusion), visit 2 (anticipated week 5), visit 3 (end of radio(chemo)therapy), and week 24 (follow-up) |
|
Secondary |
Effect on quality-adjusted life years |
Measured by EuroQoL |
Visit 1 (moment of inclusion), visit 2 (anticipated week 5), visit 3 (end of radio(chemo)therapy), and week 24 (follow-up) |
|
Secondary |
Drug tolerance |
Monitoring of drug tolerance by local physician on weekly visits. The effects of the drug can either be unchanged, lessened, or increased. According to this, the physician will adapt the dose for patient. This will be weekly reported by the local physician to the research associate. |
Continuous monitoring from patient enrollment until week 7 or date of requiring a (dose-escalation of) strong opioid if this occurs before week 7 (end of radio(chemo)therapy) |
|
Secondary |
(S)AE |
Monitoring of drug safety by local physician according to treatment-related toxicities, scored weekly by the local physicians according to the Common Terminology Criteria of Adverse Events (NCI CTCAE 5.0). Analgesic-induced side effects will be evaluated with regard to nausea, constipation, sleepiness, dizziness, confusion, hypersensitivities, urinary retention, pruritus and respiratory depression. |
Continuous monitoring from patient enrollment until week 7 or date of requiring a (dose-escalation of) strong opioid if this occurs before week 7 (end of radio(chemo)therapy) |
|
Secondary |
Acceptance rate of gabapentin |
Weekly monitoring of drug compliance by local physician and research associate. Research associate counts amount of medication (gelules) that are left to assure there is therapy compliance. |
Continuous monitoring from patient enrollment until week 7 or date of requiring a (dose-escalation of) strong opioid if this occurs before week 7 (end of radio(chemo)therapy) |
|
Secondary |
Ease of use of trial medication |
Through pain diary, weekly visit by research assistant, patients will be asked about the ease of use of trial medication |
Continuous monitoring from patient enrollment until week 7 or date of requiring a (dose-escalation of) strong opioid if this occurs before week 7 (end of radio(chemo)therapy) |
|
Secondary |
Study drop-out |
Continuous follow-up of patients (weekly or daily) by research assistant |
Continuous monitoring from patient enrollment until week 7 or date of requiring a (dose-escalation of) strong opioid if this occurs before week 7 (end of radio(chemo)therapy) |
|
Secondary |
Patient satisfaction |
Through weekly visit by research assistant, patients will be asked how satisfied they are with current trial medication |
Continuous monitoring from patient enrollment until week 7 or date of requiring a (dose-escalation of) strong opioid if this occurs before week 7 (end of radio(chemo)therapy) |
|
Secondary |
Selection of biomarkers to identify patients prone to develop HN cancer pain/treatment-related pain |
Patients will be able to agree or disagree with the collection of blood samples on the informed consent form as these translational aspects are not an obligatory part of this trial. In patients who give their consent, one SST blood sample and one EDTA blood sample will be collected at the time of inclusion. |
At time of patient enrollment |
|
Secondary |
Selection of biomarkers to select patients who benefit more from analgesic treatment with gabapentin |
Patients will be able to agree or disagree with the collection of blood samples on the informed consent form as these translational aspects are not an obligatory part of this trial. In patients who give their consent, one SST blood sample and one EDTA blood sample will be collected at the time of inclusion. |
At time of patient enrollment |
|