The Effects of a Nurse-led MHealth Program for Symptom Self-management of Breast Cancer Patients Undergoing Chemotherapy
- Conditions
- Breast CancerChemotherapeutic Toxicity
- Interventions
- Device: mChemotherapy
- Registration Number
- NCT05192525
- Lead Sponsor
- The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
- Brief Summary
Breast cancer (BC) survivors will experience multiple symptoms following chemotherapy. During the pandemic of COVID-19, the closure of clinics and fear of infection lead to BC patients' challenges in self-managing their multiple symptoms in home settings. Mobile health (mHealth), without time and space limitation, plays a positive role in supporting self-management and treatment compliance. However, previous mHealth self-management studies did not report sustained beneficial effects with physician-led supervision. In oncology practice, the nurse-led model of patient self-management for breast cancer has been placed on greater emphasis. Accordingly, an innovative nurse-led supervised mHealth program was designed to support self-management for BC patients undergoing chemotherapy.
This pilot study aims to examine the feasibility and acceptability of a nurse-led mHealth-based self-management program for BC patients receiving chemotherapy, in order to provide evidence for conducting a definitive trial. The feasibility outcomes of the pilot study include subject eligibility rate, recruitment rate, and retention rate. The efficacy outcomes relate to self-efficacy (primary outcome), symptom distress and frequency, as well as health-related quality of life, and healthcare utilisation. The qualitative outcomes encompass patient- and provider-users' perceptions of the app usability and subjects' experiences of engaging in the pilot study.
- Detailed Description
This nurse-led mHealth symptom self-management program is composed of one core intervention 'mChemotherapy', one pre-chemotherapy consultation, and two follow-up visits. mChemotherapy will be specifically utilized to facilitate symptom self-management for breast cancer patients covering chemotherapy.
The objectives of the pilot study are: (i) to develop an evidence-based nurse-led mHealth guideline for self-management of chemotherapy-related symptoms; (ii) to determine the usability of a nurse-led mobile application; (iii) to pilot the methodological procedures of the randomized controlled trial; (iv) to determine enrollment rate, the eligibility rate, retention rate, and dropout rate during the preliminary RCT participant recruitment and follow-up process; (v) to preliminarily test the effectiveness of this program on self-efficacy, QoL, symptom distress and symptom frequency, as well as healthcare utilization; (vi) to identify the participants' perceptions and acceptability of the pilot study; (vii) to provide suggestions and implications for a future multicentre large-scale RCT examining the definite effects of nurse-led mHealth self-management guidelines on self-efficacy, QoL, symptom distress and symptom frequency in cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy.
The pilot study aims to examine the following null hypotheses of efficacy outcomes:
The BC patients in the mHealth group will demonstrate no difference in self-efficacy, quality of life, symptom distress and symptom frequency, as well as healthcare utilization after completing the chemotherapy at week 3 and week 6 when compared to the BC patients in the control group.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 76
- People who are 18 years or above
- Newly diagnosed with breast cancer
- Commencing chemotherapy and being prescribed with four cycles of a chemotherapy regimen
- Mobile phone and WeChat® users (a mobile application of Shenzhen city's Tencent computer system Co. Ltd.)
- Wi-Fi or 4G network users
- Able to read and write Chinese
- People who are pregnant
- Have been diagnosed with terminal-stage breast cancer (i.e., stage IV)
- Have a history of chemotherapy
- Have been prescribed with targeted therapy within three weeks of completing the chemotherapy
- Have documented mental disorders
- Have already engaged in other mHealth studies
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description mChemotherapy group mChemotherapy The intervention group participants will adopt an app "mChemotherapy" to self-manage their symptoms under nurse-led supervision for six weeks.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Acceptability Data will be collected at week 6 (T2) The intervention acceptability and usability will be tested by a self-report questionnaire, the System Usability Scale, after completing the study (week 6).
Change from Baseline Score of the Strategies Used by People to Promote Health (SUPPH) at week 3 (T1) and week 6 (T2) Data collection will be conducted before chemotherapy (baseline), at week 3 (T1), week 6 (T2) Strategies Used by People to Promote Health (SUPPH) is a health promotion strategy questionnaire, developed to evaluate the confidence of cancer patients in self-managing their disease, on the basis of expert consultations, patient interviews, and literature research. The original scale has 29 items and uses a 5-point Likert scale, from 1, indicating no confidence to 5, indicating extremely confident. High scores indicate a high level of self-efficacy on the part of the participants. The Chinese version of the SUPPH was adapted by Qian \& Yuan and the Cronbach's α coefficient of the total scale is 0.970 . SUPPH will be collected at baseline (week 0), week 3 and at the end of the study (week 6) using self-reported questionnaires handed out through the Breast Health Centre's official WeChat.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change from Baseline Score of the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Breast (FACT-B) at week 3 (T1) and week 6 (T2) Data collection will be conducted before chemotherapy (baseline), at week 3 (T1), week 6 (T2) General quality of life has been used as a prominent measurement to reflect the outcome of a treatment. Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Breast (FACT-B) is selected, since it is a HRQoL instrument specific to BC patients. FACT-B is divided into five subscales, namely, physical well-being, social/family well-being, emotional well-being, functional well-being, and additional concerns. Higher scores indicate a better QOL on the part of the participants. Wan et al. reported that the internal consistency of most domains in the simplified Chinese version of FACT-B ranged from 0.82 to 0.85. FACT-B will be collected before chemotherapy (baseline), week 3 and at the end of the study (week 6) using self-reported questionnaires handed out through the Breast Health Centre's official WeChat.
Change from Score at week 3 (T1) of the Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale-Short Form (MSAS-SF) at week 6 (T2) Data collection will be conducted at week 3 (T1) and week 6 (T2) The Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale-Short Form (MSAS-SF) is an instrument that can be used to measure BC patient symptoms of distress. This questionnaire is composed of three dimensions: the Physical Symptom dimension (PHYS), the Psychological Symptom dimension (PSYCH), and a Global Distress Index (GDI). It includes 28 items on distress and frequency in the physical symptom dimension and four items in the psychological symptom dimension during the past week. Higher scores mean more frequency, greater severity and higher distress. The simplified Chinese version of the Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale-Short Form (MSAS-SF-SC) has been found to be reliable, with Cronbach's alpha coefficients for the subscales ranging from 0.782 to 0.874. MSAS-SF will be collected at week 3 and at the end of the study (week 6) using self-reported questionnaires handed out through the Breast Health Centre's official WeChat.
Healthcare service utilization Data collection will be conducted at week 3 (T1) and week 6 (T2) Chemotherapy-induced healthcare utilisation for six weeks will be recorded in the pilot study for analysis. Three types of healthcare utilisation will be collected: patient-initiated hotline calls, unplanned visits to the ambulatory clinic, and unscheduled visits to the emergency department. These records of healthcare service will be obtained from the statistics centre of the study hospital.
End-user engagement by patients and nurses From baseline up to week 6 (T2) Data on an individual's six weeks of usage, including log-in frequency and duration of usage of the whole mChemotherapy program, are tracked in the WeChat statistics module of the background thread. Log-in frequency is recorded as the number of times a participant logged into the app for six weeks. The total duration of usage is recorded as the sum of all times in minutes between logging in and logging out.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Ruijin Hospital
🇨🇳Shanghai, Shanghai, China