Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Terminated

TerminatedNCT03987906

Symptom Screening With Targeted Early Palliative Care (STEP) Versus Usual Care for Patients With Advanced Cancer

Symptom Screening With Targeted Early Palliative Care (STEP) Versus Usual Care for Patients With Advanced Cancer: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Status
Terminated
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
69 (actual)
Sponsor
University Health Network, Toronto · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Palliative care is defined as multidisciplinary care that increases quality of life (QOL) for patients with a life-threatening illness. Although it is known that patients with the most severe physical and psychological symptoms have the greatest need for palliative care, these patients are often not referred to palliative care services in a timely manner. The investigators have developed a system called STEP (Symptom screening with Targeted Early Palliative care) that identifies patients with high symptom burden in order to offer them timely access to palliative care. The investigators are conducting a multi-center trial at Princess Margaret Cancer Centre and Kingston General Hospital to compare STEP with usual symptom screening in medical oncology clinics.

Detailed description

Randomized controlled trials have shown that when patients with advanced cancer were referred early to specialized palliative care teams, they had improved QOL, symptom control, and greater satisfaction with their cancer care. Such routine specialized palliative care intervention, while effective, may be challenging to enact broadly with widespread shortages of palliative care physicians. STEP systematically identifies patients with the greatest need, using symptom screening at every outpatient visit, with triage and targeted referral to palliative care. This could reduce resource use while directing care to the most vulnerable. Consenting patients from Breast, Lung, Gastrointestinal, Genitourinary, and Gynecology medical oncology clinics will be assigned randomly either to receive STEP or to follow usual symptom screening. All patients will complete questionnaires measuring outcomes of QOL, symptom control, depression, and satisfaction with care at recruitment, 2, 4 and 6 months. The investigators will measure the impact of STEP on these outcomes, compared to screening alone.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALSymptom screening with Targeted Early Palliative Care (STEP)The experimental arm receives routine symptom screening at every outpatient visit; if symptoms are above a certain threshold, then a triggered email is sent to a triage nurse, who calls the patient to offer early referral to and follow-up by a symptom control and palliative care team.

Timeline

Start date
2019-08-08
Primary completion
2020-09-30
Completion
2020-09-30
First posted
2019-06-17
Last updated
2022-05-23

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03987906. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Symptom Screening With Targeted Early Palliative Care (STEP) Versus Usual Care for Patients With Advanced Cancer (NCT03987906) · Clinical Trials Directory