MedPath

Association Between Health Care Provider (HCP)-Assessed ECOG Performance Status (PS) and Overall Survival, and Objectively Measure of Physical Activity (PA) Levels in Advance-cancer Patients"

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Malignant Neoplasm
Stage I Oral Cavity Cancer AJCC v6 and v7
Stage IIA Colorectal Cancer AJCC v7
Stage III Hypopharyngeal Carcinoma AJCC v7
Stage IVB Colorectal Cancer AJCC v7
Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma
Stage I Major Salivary Gland Cancer AJCC v7
Stage IIC Colorectal Cancer AJCC v7
Stage III Laryngeal Cancer AJCC v6 and v7
Stage IVA Hypopharyngeal Carcinoma AJCC v7
Interventions
Behavioral: Exercise Intervention
Other: Questionnaire Administration
Other: Health Telemonitoring
Other: Quality-of-Life Assessment
Registration Number
NCT01365169
Lead Sponsor
M.D. Anderson Cancer Center
Brief Summary

The main goal of this phase of the study is to determine if objectively assessed Physical Activity (PA) levels in advanced-cancer patients are associated with health care provider (HCP)-assessed ECOG performance status and overall survival. The purpose is to advance the evidence-base for incorporating objective assessment of Physical Activity (PA) in the context of performance status assessment in advanced cancer patients.

Detailed Description

PRIMARY OBJECTIVES:

I. To explore the feasibility and acceptability in diverse samples of cancer patients of wireless collection and transmission of data for transfer into the open-source cyberinfrastructure (CI) called Cyberinfrastructure for Comparative Effectiveness Research (CYCORE).

OUTLINE: Patients are assigned to 1 of 4 arms.

ARM I (COLORECTAL CANCER PATIENTS) (CLOSED TO ACCRUAL AS OF 01/30/14): Patients use two accelerometers, a blood pressure monitor, a heart rate monitor, a global positioning system (GPS) device, and a smart phone that prompts patients to electronically answer questions about exercise and health-related symptoms and feelings. The devices are used for 5 consecutive days. After a 2 week period, patients resume use of the devices for an additional 5 days.

ARM II (HEAD AND NECK CANCER PATIENTS) (CLOSED TO ACCRUAL AS OF 01/30/14): Patients use two accelerometers, a blood pressure monitor, a weight scale, and a smart phone that prompts patients to electronically answer questions about diet and health-related symptoms. The devices are used for 5 consecutive days. After a 2 week period, patients resume use of the devices for an additional 5 days.

ARM III (HEAD AND NECK CANCER PATIENTS) (CLOSED TO ACCRUAL AS OF 01/30/14): Patients use a smart phone that prompts patients to electronically answer questions about diet, health-related symptoms, and swallowing exercises. Patients also take video recordings of their neck while performing swallowing exercises. The device is used for 5 consecutive days. After a 2 week period, patients resume use of the device for an additional 5 days.

ARM IV (CANCER SURVIVORS THAT ARE CURRENT/FORMER SMOKERS) (CLOSED TO ACCRUAL AS OF 01/30/14): Patients use a carbon monoxide (CO) monitor and a smart phone that prompts patients to electronically answer questions about smoking. Patients also take video recordings of themselves while exhaling into the CO monitor. The devices are used for 5 consecutive days. After a 2 week period, patients resume use of the devices for an additional 5 days.

PANCREATIC CANCER STUDY (PCS): Patients receive post-surgical wellness program consisting of physical activity, nutrition counseling, and daily monitoring (physical activity, weight, and self-reported data) for up to 7 months post-op.

Technological Approach to Performance Status (TAPS) Study: Patients use two Physical Activity monitor devices, the wrist-worn device (Fitbit) continuously and the Actigraph during waking hours. Patients use the devices for 7 consecutive days.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
590
Inclusion Criteria
  • Diagnosis of any stage I - IV colorectal cancer or recurrent colorectal cancer (Arm 1)
  • Able to speak, read, and write in English (Pre-pilot phase, Arms 1-4)
  • Able to provide informed consent (Pre-pilot phase, Arms 1-4, PCS study)
  • Lives in the Houston area (Harris county or a contiguous county) (Pre-pilot phase)
  • Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) status of 0 - 2, or self-reports being up and about more than 50% of waking hours and able to provide self-care (Arm 1)
  • Diagnosis of any of the following cancers: stage 1-4b oropharyngeal, hypopharyngeal, nasopharyngeal, salivary gland or oral cavity; stage 3-4b laryngeal; any unknown primary head and neck cancer with cervical metastasis that will be addressed with treatment to bilateral necks and mucosa; or other head and neck cancers medically approved by one of our Radiation Oncology collaborating medical doctors (MDs) (Arms 2 and 3)
  • History of any cancer, other than non-melanoma skin cancer (Arm 4)
  • Admitted to being a current smoker or recent quitter upon admission to MD Anderson Cancer Center (MDACC) (Arm 4)
  • Has a valid home address and functioning home telephone number (Arm 4)
  • Lives in the Houston or surrounding area, or resides in this same area during the time period that coincides with this study (Arms 1-4)
  • Patients who will undergo curative pancreatectomy for pancreatic adenocarcinoma, pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors, or pancreatic cysts (malignant or benign) (PCS study)
  • Fluent in English (PCS study)
  • Must have telephone access and agree to engage with research personnel using telephone (PCS study)
  • Diagnosis of a metastatic or locally unresectable solid tumor (TAPS study)
  • Fluent in English (TAPS study)
  • Age 18 years or older (TAPS study)
  • ECOG performance status score between 0-3 (TAPS study)
Exclusion Criteria
  • Major surgery in the past 8 weeks (Arms 1 and 4)
  • Self-reports hypertension that is not being monitored by a physician and is not being managed with either medication, observation, or lifestyle change (Pre-pilot phase, Arms 1-3)
  • Overt cognitive difficulty demonstrated by not being clearly oriented to time or person or place (Arms 1-4)
  • Orthopedic, neurologic, or musculoskeletal disability that would interfere with the functional task of standing on a weight scale (Pre-pilot phase, Arm 2)
  • Not currently receiving radiation treatment for a cancer listed in the arm-specific inclusion criteria (Arms 2 and 3)
  • Zubrod performance status > 2, or self-reports either not being up and about more than 50% of waking hours or unable to provide self-care (Arms 2 and 3)
  • Currently receiving treatment for a cancer other than those listed in the arm-specific inclusion criteria (exception: the study does not exclude those receiving treatment for non-melanoma skin cancer) (Arms 2 and 3)
  • History of current oropharyngeal dysphagia unrelated to cancer diagnosis (e.g. dysphagia due to underlying neurogenic disorder) (Arm 3 only)
  • Active substance use disorder (diagnosed or strongly suspected) (Arm 4)
  • Currently enrolled in protocol 2014-0712 (PCS study)
  • No home access to internet (PCS study)
  • No home WiFi connection (PCS study)
  • During clinician's pre-surgical evaluation, presents with high risk for non-therapeutic resection related to cancer diagnosis (PCS study)
  • Underlying unstable cardiac or pulmonary disease or symptomatic cardiac disease (New York Heart Association functional class III or IV) (PCS study)
  • Recent fracture or acute musculoskeletal injury that precludes the ability to fully bear weight on all 4 limbs in order to participate in an exercise intervention (PCS study)
  • Poorly-controlled pain with a self-reported pain score of 7/10 at the time of enrollment (PCS study)
  • Myopathic or rheumatologic disease that impacts physical function (PCS study)
  • Has a pacemaker or other internal medical device, or reports being pregnant (PCS study)
  • Currently enrolled in protocol 2017-0198 (PCS study)
  • Demonstration of overt cognitive difficulty as demonstrated by not being clearly oriented to time or person or place (TAPS study)

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
PCS (pancreatic surgery patients)Exercise InterventionPatients receive post-surgical wellness program consisting of physical activity, nutrition counseling, and daily monitoring (physical activity, weight, and self-reported data) for up to 7 months post-op.
Arm II (head and neck cancer patients)Questionnaire Administration(CLOSED TO ACCRUAL AS OF 01/30/14) Patients use two accelerometers, a blood pressure monitor, a weight scale, and a smart phone that prompts patients to electronically answer questions about diet and health-related symptoms. The devices are used for 5 consecutive days. After a 2 week period, patients resume use of the devices for an additional 5 days.
Arm III (head and neck cancer patients)Questionnaire Administration(CLOSED TO ACCRUAL AS OF 01/30/14) Patients use a smart phone that prompts patients to electronically answer questions about diet, health-related symptoms, and swallowing exercises. Patients also take video recordings of their neck while performing swallowing exercises. The device is used for 5 consecutive days. After a 2 week period, patients resume use of the device for an additional 5 days.
PCS (pancreatic surgery patients)Health TelemonitoringPatients receive post-surgical wellness program consisting of physical activity, nutrition counseling, and daily monitoring (physical activity, weight, and self-reported data) for up to 7 months post-op.
Arm I (colorectal cancer patients)Health Telemonitoring(CLOSED TO ACCRUAL AS OF 01/30/14) Patients use two accelerometers, a blood pressure monitor, a heart rate monitor, a GPS device, and a smart phone that prompts patients to electronically answer questions about exercise and health-related symptoms and feelings. The devices are used for 5 consecutive days. After a 2 week period, patients resume use of the devices for an additional 5 days.
Arm II (head and neck cancer patients)Health Telemonitoring(CLOSED TO ACCRUAL AS OF 01/30/14) Patients use two accelerometers, a blood pressure monitor, a weight scale, and a smart phone that prompts patients to electronically answer questions about diet and health-related symptoms. The devices are used for 5 consecutive days. After a 2 week period, patients resume use of the devices for an additional 5 days.
Arm IV (cancer survivors that are current/former smokers)Health Telemonitoring(CLOSED TO ACCRUAL AS OF 01/30/14) Patients use a CO monitor and a smart phone that prompts patients to electronically answer questions about smoking. Patients also take video recordings of themselves while exhaling into the CO monitor. The devices are used for 5 consecutive days. After a 2 week period, patients resume use of the devices for an additional 5 days.
PCS (pancreatic surgery patients)Quality-of-Life AssessmentPatients receive post-surgical wellness program consisting of physical activity, nutrition counseling, and daily monitoring (physical activity, weight, and self-reported data) for up to 7 months post-op.
Arm I (colorectal cancer patients)Questionnaire Administration(CLOSED TO ACCRUAL AS OF 01/30/14) Patients use two accelerometers, a blood pressure monitor, a heart rate monitor, a GPS device, and a smart phone that prompts patients to electronically answer questions about exercise and health-related symptoms and feelings. The devices are used for 5 consecutive days. After a 2 week period, patients resume use of the devices for an additional 5 days.
PCS (pancreatic surgery patients)Questionnaire AdministrationPatients receive post-surgical wellness program consisting of physical activity, nutrition counseling, and daily monitoring (physical activity, weight, and self-reported data) for up to 7 months post-op.
TAPS (Technological Approach to Performance Status)Health TelemonitoringPatients use two Physical Activity monitor devices, the wrist-worn device (Fitbit) continuously and the Actigraph during waking hours. Patients use the devices for 7 consecutive days.
Arm III (head and neck cancer patients)Health Telemonitoring(CLOSED TO ACCRUAL AS OF 01/30/14) Patients use a smart phone that prompts patients to electronically answer questions about diet, health-related symptoms, and swallowing exercises. Patients also take video recordings of their neck while performing swallowing exercises. The device is used for 5 consecutive days. After a 2 week period, patients resume use of the device for an additional 5 days.
Arm IV (cancer survivors that are current/former smokers)Questionnaire Administration(CLOSED TO ACCRUAL AS OF 01/30/14) Patients use a CO monitor and a smart phone that prompts patients to electronically answer questions about smoking. Patients also take video recordings of themselves while exhaling into the CO monitor. The devices are used for 5 consecutive days. After a 2 week period, patients resume use of the devices for an additional 5 days.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Physical Activity (PA) AssessmentUp to 7 days

PA will be measured by two different devices, (1) a consumer-grade wrist-worn device that collects continuous PA data (Fitbit), and (2) a research-grade, hip-worn accelerometer (Actigraph)

ECOG Performance StatusUp to 2 weeks

Eastern Cooperation Oncology Group (ECOG) is a 6-point performance status scale used to assess performance using PA as a key indicator (e.g., 0 = fully active, 2 = up and about more than 50% of walking hours, 5 = dead) Performance status will be assessed per usual clinical practice and will be recorded in the medical record.

Study completion (defined as completing the final assessment)Up to 7 months after baseline
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Acceptability of using home-based health monitor devices (e.g. Fitbit, Actigraph, CO monitor, weight scales) among participants.Up to 2 weeks
Adherence to procedures for home-based health monitor devices activation (e.g. Fitbit, Actigraph, CO monitor, weight scales) self-monitoring (e.g. PA, weight), and self-reported data capture by the devices.Up to 2 weeks
Correlation between PA data from the Actigraph and FitbitUp to 7 days

Association between PA measured using a Fitbit and PA measured using Actigraph

Participants ability to activate, set-up, and use the home-based health monitor devices (e.g. Fitbit, Actigraph, CO monitor, weight scales).Up to 2 weeks
Accrual of Diverse Sample of Cancer-PatientsUp to 2 weeks
Correlation between patients' ECOG performance status scores and PA dataUp to 7 days

Association between performance status (PS) assesses by the patient's medical oncologist, and PA data

Retention of using home-based health monitor devices (e.g. Fitbit, Actigraph, CO monitor, weight scales) among participants.Up to 2 weeks
Successful upload of data from the home-based health monitor devices to the Cyberinfrastructure for Comparative effectiveness Research (CYCORE) for future analysis.Up to 2 weeks
Correlation between PA data and Overall Survivor (OS)Up to 7 days

Association between Physical Activity (PA) data and the Overall Survivor (OS) rate

CYCORE Data availability for clinicians and researchers in order to be able to daily monitor patients using home-based health monitor devices (e.g. Fitbit, Actigraph, CO monitor, weight scales).Up to 2 weeks

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

M D Anderson Cancer Center

🇺🇸

Houston, Texas, United States

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath