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Clinical Trials/NCT01245621
NCT01245621
Completed
N/A

Early vs. Later Palliative Cancer Care: Clinical and Biobehavioral Outcomes

Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center7 sites in 1 country360 target enrollmentOctober 2010
ConditionsAdvanced Cancer

Overview

Phase
N/A
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Advanced Cancer
Sponsor
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center
Enrollment
360
Locations
7
Primary Endpoint
Change in patient's quality of living over time
Status
Completed
Last Updated
12 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

ENABLE III is a randomized clinical trial that evaluates a phone-based palliative care intervention designed to improve quality of life, mood, and symptom management for patients with an advanced stage cancer and their caregivers.

The primary aims of this clinical trial are to determine whether a palliative care intervention (introduced immediately or 12 weeks after diagnosis) can improve survival, quality of life, mood, symptom intensity and end-of-life care.

Detailed Description

In 2008, cancer claimed more than 565,000 American lives -1,500 people a day. Palliative care strives to improve quality of life (QOL) and to prevent "bad deaths" by providing expert, interdisciplinary care to manage the effects of disease and treatment. Effective end-of-life (EOL) care depends upon proactive, patient-centered interventions to prepare patients and families for the challenges of terminal illness. We were able to demonstrate the feasibility and efficacy of a concurrent oncology palliative care (COPC) intervention in improving quality of life and mood in our previous studies ENABLE I and ENABLE II; however, a number of gaps in our knowledge remain. Patients will be randomized to begin the intervention either immediately or 12 weeks after a new diagnosis of advanced or recurrent cancer. This phone-based intervention consists of: 1) an Advanced Practice Palliative Care Nurse Interventionist instituting 1a) a 6-session manualized patient curriculum- Charting Your Course (CYC), 1b) a 3-session manualized, caregiver curriculum- the Creativity Optimism Planning Expert information (COPE) program, and 1c) on-going patient and caregiver follow up; and 2) Palliative Care Team Comprehensive Assessment \& Management.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
October 2010
End Date
September 2013
Last Updated
12 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

  • Not provided

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Change in patient's quality of living over time

Time Frame: baseline, 6,12,18,24,36 and every 12 weeks until death or end of study

Quality of living assessments will include quality of life (QOL), mood, and symptom intensity measures using the following measures: * Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Palliative Care (FACIT-Pal): * Quality of Life at End of Life (QUAL-E). * Center for Epidemiological Study- Depression (CES-D).

Change in caregiver quality of life, burden and grief over time

Time Frame: baseline, 6,12,18,24,36, and every 12 weeks until patient death or end of study

Caregiver burden and QOL will be measured using: * Quality of Life- Cancer- a self-report measure of QOL for caregivers of patients with cancer. * Montgomery Borgatta Caregiver Burden Scale -a self-report measure of caregiver burden. * Center for Epidemiological Study- Depression CESD is a measure of depressive symptoms. * Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy - Spiritual Module (FACIT-Sp) - a measure of spiritual well-being developed for persons with chronic illness. * Prigerson Inventory of Complicated Grief-Short form (ICG-SF) embedded in the Quality of Death and Dying (QODD).

Quality of end of life care

Time Frame: chart review at time of death and caregiver proxy interview 2-3 months after patient death

End of life (EOL) Care Data Collection Form: This form is used to collect information about the quality of EOL care and circumstances surrounding the last 48 hours of life for patients who die in hospital, nursing home, or home. Quality of Dying and Death Measure (QODD). The QODD is a structured interview conducted with a caregiver to measure the quality of a patient's last week of life. The interview assesses the caregiver's perception of patient symptoms, preferences, and satisfaction with care.

Estimate and compare the hazard ratios and median survival before and after 1 year from enrollment

Time Frame: From enrollment until patient death or end of study

We hypothesize that Early entry patients will have longer overall survival at one year compared with Later entry patients.

Secondary Outcomes

  • Determine feasibility of enrolling less common solid tumors and hematologic malignancies.(Estimated recruitment period of 2 years)
  • Mediating mechanisms and moderators of the concurrent palliative care intervention.(baseline, 6,12,18,24,36 weeks and every 12 weeks until death or end of study)
  • Explore patterns of stress (diurnal salivary and plasma cortisol) and immune biomarkers (lymphocyte subsets and cytokines)(Baseline, 12, and 24 weeks)
  • Examine the relations among quality of life, mood, symptoms, survival, stress and immune biomarkers.(Baseline, 12, and 24 weeks)

Study Sites (7)

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