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Survivorship clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05087784 Not yet recruiting - Survivorship Clinical Trials

AlloLife - Life After Transplantation

AlloLife
Start date: March 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Survivors of allo HCT can experience long-term survival, which is however limited by a number of late effects. These will be addressed in AlloLife to improve quality of life (QoL) and survival.

NCT ID: NCT05020561 Not yet recruiting - Breast Cancer Clinical Trials

Life After Breast Cancer - Impact of a Life Coach

Lifecoach
Start date: September 15, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The objectives of our intervention are to 1. Ease the transition between cancer treatment and active life, and 2. Allow breast cancer survivors to take control of their lives. The primary objective of this study is to: 1) Determine whether individual life coaching (i.e., individualized guidance that helps to put resources into action) can significantly improve quality of life and post-traumatic growth among women who have been recently treated with breast cancer. It is hypothesized that: 1. Participants who receive both "group coaching sessions" and "individualized coaching sessions" will report greater post-traumatic growth and quality of life, and less fear of cancer recurrence when compared to the breast cancer survivors who received only the group coaching sessions or usual care. 2. Participants who receive only the group coaching sessions will report greater post-traumatic growth and quality of life, and lesser fear of cancer recurrence when compared to the participants who receive usual care.

NCT ID: NCT04267627 Not yet recruiting - Survivorship Clinical Trials

Telemedicine Nurse-Led Intervention for Rural Cancer Survivors

CARING
Start date: December 31, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will evaluate the impact, cost-effectiveness, and patient perspectives of Comprehensive Assistance: Rural Intervention, Nursing, and Guidance (CARING), a nurse-led supportive care protocol delivered using telemedicine videoconferencing aimed at reducing unmet needs in a rural head and neck cancer population. Specific aims: 1) Test the efficacy of CARING, delivered with and without telemedicine, compared to a control group. 2) Conduct a cost-effectiveness analysis of a nurse-led telemedicine visit. 3) Evaluate patient perceptions of a telemedicine intervention. Design: We will use a three-arm randomized control design to determine the efficacy of CARING delivered face-to-face, vs. CARING over telemedicine, vs. usual care. Costs will be determine for incremental cost effectiveness analysis, with quality of life years as the effectiveness variable. Patient perceptions will be evaluated qualitatively using the Practical, Robust Implementation and Sustainability Model (PRISM), designed to evaluate translation of research into practice and quantitatively using the Telemedicine Satisfaction and Usefulness Questionnaire (TSUQ). Sample: We will enroll 450 head and neck cancer survivors of any stage who have completed treatment within the last 6 weeks (address over sampling of rural). Procedures: Following randomization, those in the intervention arm will either receive the nurse-led intervention in a clinic setting or over telemedicine videoconferencing 6 weeks following their in-person, end of treatment medical visit. Assessments at baseline, 6 weeks following the intervention, and 6 months following the intervention will document unmet needs using the Short Form Survivorship Unmet Needs (SF-SUNS) and quality of life using the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies- Head and Neck (FACT-HN) and the TSUQ and PRISM-guided questionnaires immediately following intervention. Health utilization costs at the societal and health system levels will be collected from the electronic medical record and patient interviews.