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Testing eSCCIP: An eHealth Psychosocial Intervention for English and Spanish Speaking Parents of Children With Cancer

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Pediatric Cancer
Interventions
Behavioral: eSCCIP/eSCCIP-SP
Behavioral: Coping Space
Registration Number
NCT05294302
Lead Sponsor
Nemours Children's Clinic
Brief Summary

It is critical to provide accessible evidence-based psychosocial support to parents and caregivers of children with cancer (PCCC) in order to mitigate individual and family-level psychosocial risks. This effectiveness trial evaluates an eHealth intervention for English- and Spanish-speaking (PCCC) with study endpoints focused on decreasing negative psychosocial sequelae (acute distress, posttraumatic stress, and anxiety) and improving coping abilities (coping self-efficacy, cognitive coping strategies). The long-term goal of this research program is to sustain and disseminate an effective, scalable, high-reach, and cost-effective intervention to provide crucial support to PCCC across the pediatric cancer trajectory.

Detailed Description

The psychosocial needs and risks of children with cancer and their families are well-documented in the literature, including the increased risk of parental distress, posttraumatic stress, and anxiety. There is a critical need to provide evidence-based psychosocial care to parents and caregivers of children with cancer (PCCC), although many challenges exist regarding in-person intervention delivery. eHealth interventions represent an exciting potential opportunity to address many of the barriers to in-person intervention delivery in this population, but are not yet widely utilized in pediatric psychosocial cancer care. The COVID-19 pandemic has further illuminated the need for flexible, acceptable, and accessible eHealth psychosocial interventions.

The Electronic Surviving Cancer Competently Intervention Program (eSCCIP) is an innovative eHealth intervention for PCCC, delivered through a combination of self-guided interactive online content and telehealth follow-up with a therapist. eSCCIP aims to decrease symptoms of acute distress, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress while improving coping abilities by delivering evidence-based therapeutic content through a flexible, easily accessible eHealth tool. The intervention is delivered to one or two PCCC per family, but content is designed to apply to the whole family system. eSCCIP is grounded in principles of cognitive-behavioral and family systems therapy and is adapted from two efficacious in-person interventions for caregivers of children with cancer, the Surviving Cancer Competently Intervention Program (SCCIP) and the Surviving Cancer Competently Intervention Program - Newly Diagnosed (SCCIP-ND). eSSCIP has been rigorously developed through a stakeholder-engaged development process involving close collaboration with PCCC, content experts in pediatric oncology and eHealth, and web design and development experts. A Spanish language adaptation of eSCCIP, El Programa Electronico de Intervencion para Superar Cancer Competentemente (eSCCIP-SP), has recently been developed following a rigorous process and is now ready for testing as well. The self-guided online modules of eSCCIP/eSCCIP-SP feature a mix of didactic video content, novel multifamily video discussion groups featuring parents of children with cancer, and hands-on interactive activities. P

The objective of the proposed study is to test eSCCIP/eSCCIP-SP in a rigorous, multisite RCT compared to an education control condition. The primary study endpoint is a reduction in acute distress from baseline to post-intervention, with secondary endpoints focused on reductions in symptoms of posttraumatic stress and anxiety ,and improvements in coping self-efficacy and cognitive coping. Data will be collected at three timepoints (baseline, post-intervention, and three-month follow-up). An additional, exploratory aim will be focused on implementation strategies and potential costs and cost-savings of eSCCIP/eSCCIP-SP, laying the groundwork for future trials focused on dissemination and implementation, stepped-care models, and intervention refinement.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
350
Inclusion Criteria
  • Participants must be the parent or primary caregiver of a child (ages 0 - 18 years old) diagnosed with cancer.
  • Participants must be able to speak and read English or Spanish.
  • Participants must have access to the internet through a computer or mobile device (e.g., smartphone, tablet).
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Exclusion Criteria
  • PCCC are ineligible to participate if their child is not expected to live longer than six months from the time of potential recruitment
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Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
eSCCIP/eSCCIP-SPeSCCIP/eSCCIP-SPThe Electronic Surviving Cancer Competently Intervention Program (eSCCIP) is an innovative eHealth intervention that combines cognitive behavioral and family systems therapy to provide parents and caregivers of children with cancer (PCCC) with evidence-based coping skills and psychosocial support focused on the family unit. eSCCIP has three 30-minute, self-directed, online modules which feature a unique mix of original video content and interactive activities, supplemented by three telehealth follow-up sessions. A stakeholder-informed Spanish-language adaption of eSCCIP (eSCCIP-SP) has been developed and will be offered to Spanish-speaking PCCC. eSCCIP aims to reduce acute distress and symptoms of post-traumatic stress while increasing positive coping self-appraisal and use of cognitive coping skills.
Coping SpaceCoping SpacePCCC randomized to the patient education control condition will be given access to a website with information about psychosocial functioning, coping, and PTSS related to pediatric cancer. This website will be hosted on the same platform as the intervention, available in English and Spanish, and will consist of information modified from CopingSpace.org. CopingSpace.org is an evidence-informed website developed by Ryan's Case for Smiles, a national organization dedicated to supporting families impacted by pediatric cancer and other chronic diseases.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
K-6Up to 20 weeks

Questionnaire to measure acute distress.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
PCL-5Up to 20 weeks

Questionnaire to assess for symptoms of PTSD in civilian population.

The COVID-19 Exposure and Family Impact Scale (CEFIS)Up to 20 weeks

The CEFIS assesses the extent to which a family has experienced or been "exposed" to COVID-19 related potentially traumatic events (e.g., economic changes, illness in family) and the impact of these events on the family's functioning and wellbeing.

Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social SupportUp to 20 weeks

Questionnaire to measure perceived social support from family, friends, and significant other.

Coping Self-Efficacy ScaleUp to 20 weeks

Questionnaire to measure perceived ability to cope effectively with challenging situations across three domains (use problem-focused coping, stop unpleasant emotions and thoughts, get support from friends and family).

Cognitive Emotion Regulation QuestionnaireUp to 20 weeks

Questionnaire to identify cognitive coping strategies used after a negative event or situation. Measures nine different cognitive coping strategies.

Distress ThermometerUp to 20 weeks

Single-item indicator of psychosocial distress that is widely used in the oncology.

PROMIS Short Form v1.0 - Anxiety - 8aUp to 20 weeks

Questionnaire measuring symptoms of anxiety.

Trial Locations

Locations (3)

Nemours Children's Health, Delaware

🇺🇸

Wilmington, Delaware, United States

MD Anderson Cancer Center

🇺🇸

Houston, Texas, United States

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

🇺🇸

Los Angeles, California, United States

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