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Improving PRO for Patients with Cancer Using ECAs and Data Visualization

Not Applicable
Not yet recruiting
Conditions
Cancer
Interventions
Behavioral: REDCap Survey
Behavioral: Embodied Conversational Agent
Registration Number
NCT05948618
Lead Sponsor
Tufts Medical Center
Brief Summary

Over the past decade, the investigators have developed and tested a toll with the potential to enhance PROs at the individual level- embodied conversational agents (ECA), which are computer characters that simulate face-to-face conversation using voice, hand gestures, gaze cues, and other nonverbal behavior. The investigators have successfully used ECAs in behavioral interventions for populations with limited health literacy, elderly patients, and patients with cancer. Face-to-face encounters, in conjunction with written instructions supported by pictures, remains one of the best methods for communicating information in general but is particularly effective for individuals with limited health literacy. The investigators have also demonstrated that ECAs can be used as valid alternatives to standard paper-based surveys for substance use screening, and that the display of empathy for patients and other relational behavior by ECAs leads to increased engagement by patients over time.

Detailed Description

There is increasing recognition of the important of patient-reported outcomes (PROs) for assessment of health-related quality of life in both research and clinical settings. PROs are especially important for inherently subjective but crucial clinical phenomena such as pain, mood, and fatigue. PROs can also provide valid assessments of health where performance-based objective measures are possible, but cost prohibitive or complicated. Despite much research on PROs, concerns about reliability and validity persist, especially when used at the individual level, particularly among patients who may struggle to understand PRO questions, such as those with low health literacy.

Over the past decade, the investigators have developed and tested a tool with the potential to enhance PROs at the individual level - embodied conversational agents (ECA), which are computer characters that simulate face-to-face conversation using voice, hand gestures, gaze cues and other nonverbal behavior. The investigators have successfully used ECAs in behavioral interventions for populations with limited health literacy, elderly patients, and patients with cancer. Face-to-face encounters, in conjunction with written instructions supported by pictures, remains one of the best methods for communicating information in general, but is particularly effective for individuals with limited health literacy. The investigators have also demonstrated that ECAs can be used as valid alternatives to standard paper-based surveys for substance use screening, and that the display of empathy for patients and other relational behavior by ECAs leads to increased engagement by patients over time.

The goal of this study is to adapt our prior work on ECAs to produce ECA-PRO, a framework for administering PROs over time using an ECA. ECA-PRO will be used to administer PROs from the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS), as well as measures from the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE). The plan is to administer PROMIS measures relevant to cancer including physical functioning, fatigue, depression, anxiety, and pain interference. This study will test the system in an RCT with 100 patients receiving chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy for gastrointestinal or head and neck cancer. Participants will be randomized to provide data for 6 weeks using ECA-PRO (n=50) versus standard web administration (REDCap) (n=50).

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
100
Inclusion Criteria
  • At least 18 years of age or older
  • Able to read and speak english
  • Can independently consent
  • Must have adequate corrected vision to use the ECA system (based on a 1 minute ECA functional screener)
  • Must have adequate hearing to use the ECA system.
  • Has a diagnosis of gastrointestinal cancer or head and neck cancer for which they are currently receiving chemotherapy and/or radiation treatment.
  • Provider subjects must be practicing oncologists at BMC.
Exclusion Criteria
  • If the subject is incarcerated
  • If the subject plans to leave the Boston area in the next 6 weeks
  • Is not able to use the ECA screener

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
RedCap SurveyREDCap SurveyAn internet-based measure will use PROMIS Profile measures which will include depression, anxiety, fatigue, pain intensity and interference, sleep disturbance, physical function and satisfaction with social role
Embodied Conversational AgentEmbodied Conversational AgentThe ECA systems compromises 1) a smartphone based ECA patient interface; 2) clinician authoring tool, to enable new measurement systems to be rapidly configured 3) clinician and patient data visualizations; and 4) a central server with relation database, administrative user interfaces and ability to send asynchronous notifications to users' smartphones.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
The degree of missing data will be investigated to gauge the extent to which patients are actively engaging with the ECA-PRO system.6 weeks

Assessing the completeness of the Patient-Reported Outcomes version of the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (PRO-CTCAE) survey questions, taking into account the number of items that have been satisfactorily completed. By examining prevalence of missing data, the investigators aim to infer the level of patient utilization of the ECA-PRO system.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Fatigue6 weeks

There will be items from the PRO-CTCAE survey questions, that will ask participants to report the frequency of their symptoms related to fatigue. Participants will fill out this survey with the ECA or in REDCap (depending on the intervention participants are receiving).

Physical function6 weeks

There will be items from the PRO-CTCAE survey questions, that will ask participants to report the frequency of their symptoms related to their physical functioning. Participants will fill out this survey with the ECA or in REDCap (depending on the intervention participants are receiving).

Anxiety6 weeks

There will be items from the PRO-CTCAE survey questions, that will ask participants to report the frequency of their anxiety symptoms. Participants will fill out this survey with the ECA or in REDCap (depending on the intervention participants are receiving).

Sleep Disturbance6 weeks

There will be items from the PRO-CTCAE survey questions, that will ask participants to report the frequency of their sleep disturbance. Participants will fill out this survey with the ECA or in REDCap (depending on the intervention participants are receiving).

Depression6 weeks

There will be items from the PRO-CTCAE survey questions, that will ask participants to report the frequency of their depression symptoms. Participants will fill out this survey with the ECA or in REDCap (depending on the intervention participants are receiving).

Pain Interference6 weeks

There will be items from the PRO-CTCAE survey questions, that will ask participants to report the frequency of pain interference. Participants will fill out this survey with the ECA or in REDCap (depending on the intervention participants are receiving).

Ability to participate in social roles and activities6 weeks

There will be items from the PRO-CTCAE survey questions, that will ask participants to report the frequency of their pain and how it impacts their ability to participate in social roles and activities. Participants will fill out this survey with the ECA or in REDCap (depending on the intervention participants are receiving).

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Boston Medical Center

🇺🇸

Boston, Massachusetts, United States

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