An Educational Intervention for Patients With Bladder Cancer
- Conditions
- Bladder Cancer
- Interventions
- Behavioral: Education InterventionBehavioral: Nutrition Intervention
- Registration Number
- NCT01915121
- Lead Sponsor
- Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
- Brief Summary
The study main objectives are to enhance treatment decision making and improve quality of life and post-treatment health care among patients diagnosed with invasive bladder cancer.
Bladder cancer (BL Ca) is the 5th most commonly diagnosed cancer in the US . BL Ca is more common among men than women and 90% of all patients are over the age of 55. Surgery to remove the bladder followed by one of three diversion techniques (i.e., ileal conduit, continent reservoir, and neobladder) is the standard therapy following invasive bladder cancer. The emotional, functional, physical, and social impact of invasive Bl Ca treatment on patients' QOL and adjustment can be devastating. This impact significantly varies by treatment option. Treatment decision making in for BL Ca is difficult at best and potentially susceptible to a number of cognitive and affective factors (e.g., patients' emotional reaction, values, and expectations). Thus, in addition to adjusting to a potential life-threatening disease, having to cope with uncertainty about the efficacy and outcomes of different treatment options adds to the overall distress and may impair effective decision-making. In spite of increasing efforts in health communication and patient education, no study has examined treatment decision making among invasive bladder patients or has provided an educational intervention to facilitate treatment decision making among this population. To this end, and guided by the Self-Regulation theory (SRT) that emphasizes the role of cognitive and emotional factors in decision making, we have designed and pilot tested the acceptability of a preliminary educational and training experiential intervention (ETE) to address this gap in the literature. The ETE intervention uses new and innovative educational strategies and methods to educate patients about their treatment options and to facilitate their treatment decision making.
- Detailed Description
The goals of the study are: 1) to further enhance the design and application of the ETE intervention, and 2) to provide data on the efficacy of the refined ETE intervention in a randomized-controlled study (RCT). To achieve these 2 goals, the study is divided in to 2 phases.
PHASE 1: To enhance and refine the design and application of the preliminary ETE intervention:
Aim 1-a: To explore knowledge, beliefs, values and expectations about treatment options, treatment decision making, and quality of life (QOL) among patients with BL Ca.
To achieve Aim 1-a of Phase 1, as a first step, 2 focus groups (FG; N = 10 each) of invasive BL Ca patients will be conducted to a) examine knowledge, beliefs, values, expectations, and affective responses about treatment options and treatment decision making, b) record difficulties and problems in post-surgical health care (e.g., using stoma appliances and catheters), and c) explore concerns patients have as they live with the impact of treatment. The ETE intervention will be refined based on FG results.
Aim 1-b: To explore patients' acceptability of the refined ETE intervention. To achieve Aim 1-b of Phase 1, additional 2 FG (FG; N = 10 each) of BL Ca survivors will be conducted to solicit input about the design and acceptability of the refined ETE intervention.
PHASE 2: Aim 2. To assess the efficacy of the ETE intervention in small RCT To achieve Aim 2 of Phase 2, a two-group RCT (standard care (SC) plus time and attention control condition, N = 62 patients; SC plus ETE intervention N = 62 patients) will be conducted to examine the efficacy of the ETE intervention. Phase 2 will provide a) a test of the efficacy of the refined ETE intervention for reducing decisional conflict and regret, and improving QOL and post-treatment stoma and pouch care controlling for potential clinical and socio-demographic covariates (e.g., treatment type, age).
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 43
- treatment of invasive Bladder Cancer a with cystectomy and one of the three major urinary diversion methods
- English speaking
- between the ages of 18 and 85
- able and willing to provide informed consent
- may have received neoadjuvant or adjuvant chemotherapy, radiation therapy, and immunotherapy (BCG)
- metastatic disease or cancer recurrence
- presence of other primary cancers
- no access to a telephone
Phase 2 (randomized-controlled-study)
Additional Exclusion Criteria:
- treatment decision is made and /beginning/completion of treatment.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Education Intervention Education Intervention In this session, participant will be provided with information about bladder cancer treatment options, and training tools directly related to Bladder Cancer. Nutrition Intervention Nutrition Intervention In this session, participant will be provided with information about nutrition information directly related to bladder cancer recovery
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Decisional Regret Scale 6 month follow up Bladder Cancer knowledge Scale
The intervention is designed to enhance treatment decision making.Decisional Self-Efficacy Scale 6 month follow up The intervention is designed to enhance treatment decision making.
Treatment-related Values 6 month follow up The intervention is designed to enhance treatment decision making.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method post-surgical self-care 6 month follow up FACT-BL Ca additional concern
CES-D scale Illness Perception Questionnaire (IPQ) 6 month follow up Cancer worries scale 6 month follow up quality of life 6 month follow up FACT-BL, Emotional, physical, function, and social Wellbeing Subscales
Trial Locations
- Locations (2)
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
🇺🇸New York, New York, United States
James J. Peters VA Medical Center
🇺🇸The Bronx, New York, United States