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CompletedNCT03905876

Psychological Experience of Discontinuation an Early Phase Treatment by Patients

Psychological Experience of the End of the Treatment During a Clincal Trial of the Early Phase and Role of the Initial prédispositions ( VRAIMENT)

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
182 (actual)
Sponsor
Institut du Cancer de Montpellier - Val d'Aurelle · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

While there is currently some study on the motivations and experiences of patients integrating early phase clinical trials, to our knowledge, no study has explored the future of patients coming out of these trials. It is therefore urgent to better understand the feelings and experiences of patients who discontinue their treatment in a clinical trial of early phase (EP) to provide them with tailored and personalized support. In addition, the end of treatment may have a different impact on the person depending on whether the treatment was discontinued due to the protocol (the patient received the full treatment as planned) or to an early withdrawal (intolerable toxicities or progression of the disease).

Detailed description

EP trials are crucial in the development of a new cancer treatment. Given the side effects and limited knowledge of any new treatment, the inclusion of patients in this EP faces ethical barriers and communication barriers. This is all the more true as EPs are generally aimed at patients with advanced cancer. Also, faced with these different issues, volunteer patients usually have ambivalent motives. Catt and his collaborators have shown that the primary motivations for agreeing to integrate an early phase are the medical benefits, then the best option available, the maintenance of hope and only then, the aid to research. And more, at the beginning of a EP trial, most patients simultaneously experience multiple complex symptoms related to their cancer or treatment. These symptoms and their functional consequences generate psychological distress and reduce their quality of life related to health. Measuring psychological distress and quality of life before entering a clinical trial is therefore essential for the analysis of psychopathological processes. Since emotional regulation involves many aspects, it seems scientifically relevant to choose central scales, which cover broad psychopathological functions, to capture the psychological distress of patients. This battery of scales should include an assessment of levels of anxiety, depression and anger (as markers of irritability) but also pre-morbid psychological predispositions. Indeed, some variables such as resilience and optimism are known to influence the level of psychopathological symptomatology and the experience of cancer. Finally, qualitative interviews would better capture the experience of patients with advanced cancer when they are confronted with an end of treatment in EP.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERQuestionnaireQuestionnaire to evaluate psychological experience

Timeline

Start date
2019-01-21
Primary completion
2024-04-04
Completion
2024-04-04
First posted
2019-04-05
Last updated
2025-02-13

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03905876. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.