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N/A N=40 Randomized Treatment

In Person and mHealth Coping Skills Training for Symptom Management and Steps in Stem Cell Transplant Patients

Stem Cell Transplant

Enrolled (actual)
40
Serious AEs
0.0%
Results posted
Mar 2024
Primary outcome: Primary: Feasibility as Measured by Number of Participants Accrued to the Study Within 16 Months — 28; 51; 4; 40 Participants

Study Design & Population

Study type
Interventional
Phase
N/A
Interventions
HCT Symptoms and Steps (Behavioral)
Age
Adult, Older Adult · 18+ yrs
Sex
All
Sponsor
Duke University
Primary completion
Dec 2021

Outcome Measures

OutcomeResultp-value
PRIMARY
Feasibility as Measured by Number of Participants Accrued to the Study Within 16 Months
28; 51; 4; 40
PRIMARY
Number of Participants Who Adhere to at Least 80% of the Study Protocol
17; 18
PRIMARY
Number of Participants Who do Not Complete the 3-month Post-treatment Follow-up Assessment
3; 2
PRIMARY
Acceptability as Measured by the Client Satisfaction Questionnaire (CSQ) 8-item Version
27.89
SECONDARY
Change in Physical Disability as Measured by the the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy (FACT)
4.78; 6.94
SECONDARY
Change in Pain Severity
-.79; .02
SECONDARY
Change in Fatigue
-2.62; -4.72
SECONDARY
Change in Physical Activity
1686.35; 1001.50
SECONDARY
Change in Depression
-1.28; -2.72
SECONDARY
Change in Anxiety.
-1.28; -1.22
SECONDARY
Change in Self-Efficacy
-.98; .85

Summary

Hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HCT) is an aggressive treatment for life-threatening cancers. HCT improves survival, but most HCT patients experience significant physical disability, which is exacerbated by persistent symptoms. Pain, fatigue, and psychological distress are the most prevalent and debilitating symptoms. HCT patients experience a significant increase in disability as their pain, fatigue, and distress increase. This disability and symptom burden interferes with patients' ability to engage in recommended physical activity that can improve disability, symptoms, and other outcomes. Disability and symptoms also complicate an already challenging recovery course; HCT patients return home, often far from their medical team, are restricted from normal activities and socially isolated. These disability, symptom and activity challenges increase the risk for post-transplant complications and may compromise life expectancy. Teaching HCT patients to cope with symptoms and activity is critical to helping them increase activity and reduce disability. Cognitive behavioral coping skills training protocols can enhance HCT patients' ability to cope with symptoms (pain, fatigue, distress) that interfere with physical activity. However, the application of these protocols to HCT patients is limited by in person sessions, delivery of sessions in a medical center setting, and/or lack of tailoring to HCT patients' specific needs. Mobile health (mHealth) technologies can improve and extend intervention strategies to cope with symptoms and physical activity upon return home. Behavioral intervention strategies are needed to enable HCT patients to effectively cope with symptoms to improve their ability to engage in physical activity that can improve physical disability. The investigators aim to develop and test a combined coping skills training and activity coaching protocol that: first, is feasible and acceptable, and second, improves physical disability, as well as pain, fatigue, distress, and physical activity in HCT patients. Specifically, the investigators will develop and test an in-person and mHealth HCT Coping Skills Training for Symptom Management and Daily Steps (HCT Symptoms and Steps) intervention protocol. To do this, the investigators will develop a mobile app, conduct focus groups, complete user testing, and conduct a small randomized controlled trial (RCT) to examine feasibility, acceptability, and outcome patterns suggesting intervention efficacy of the developed HCT Symptoms and Steps protocol. Following the development phase of the study (i.e., focus groups), the investigators will conduct user testing with 10 cancer patients who have undergone HCT; all 10 patients will receive the HCT Symptoms and Steps intervention. Next, the investigators will randomly assign 40 cancer participants who have undergone HCT and report pain, fatigue and stress to receive either HCT Symptoms and Steps or HCT Education. The investigators will test whether HCT Symptoms and Steps is feasible and acceptable to HCT patients, and improves physical disability, as well as other important outcomes. The investigators expect that HCT Symptoms and Steps will be feasible and acceptable to HCT patients and, compared to HCT Education, will be more likely to lead to improvements in physical disability, as well as pain, fatigue, distress, physical activity, and self-efficacy for symptom management. The investigators' goal is to demonstrate the feasibility, acceptability, and positive impact of a hybrid in-person and mHealth coping skills training and activity coaching intervention that reduces physical disability by concurrently and synergistically decreasing symptom burden and increasing physical activity. This project has the potential to lead to future research that can redesign existing modes of behavioral intervention delivery, improve continuity and coordination of care, and ultimately enhance patient outcomes.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Hematopoietic stem cell transplant due to oncological disease
  • Clinical ratings of pain, fatigue and psychological distress
  • Life expectancy of 12 or more months

Exclusion Criteria

  • Cognitive impairment
  • Severe psychiatric condition
  • Inability to converse in English
View full record on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03859765). Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication.

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