Trials / Completed
CompletedNCT04035447
Symptom Management for YA Cancer Survivors
Improving Symptom Management for Survivors of Young Adult Cancer
- Status
- Completed
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 65 (actual)
- Sponsor
- Duke University · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years – 39 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Not accepted
Summary
Symptom interference is common for survivors of young adult cancer (aged 18-39 at diagnosis) and impacts their abilities to achieve normative life goals (e.g., education, careers, independence, romantic/social relationships) as well as adhere to recommended follow-up care. Assistance with symptom management has been rated by young adult survivors as an important and unmet healthcare need; however, skill-based symptom management interventions have typically been tested among older cancer survivors and have not targeted the unique developmental needs of those diagnosed as young adults. The proposed research advances the health and wellbeing of young adult cancer survivors by creating a developmentally appropriate hybrid in-person/mHealth behavioral symptom management intervention which addresses variables (i.e., symptoms and symptom interference) consistently linked to significant social, economic, and health burden.
Detailed description
More than 60,000 young adults (YAs) aged 18-39 are diagnosed with cancer in the US each year. Advances in treatment have yielded five year survival rates \>70% suggesting that the majority of YAs will become long-term cancer survivors. Symptom (e.g., pain, fatigue, distress) interference is common for YA cancer survivors and impacts their abilities to achieve normative life goals (e.g., returning to work/school, achieving autonomy, pursuing social/romantic relationships) and adhere to recommended follow-up care. Symptom management has been identified as a significant issue in the transition to survivorship for YAs by the Institute of Medicine and National Cancer Institute, and assistance with symptom management is rated as an important and unmet need by YA survivors. Yet, behavioral symptom management interventions have not targeted the needs of those diagnosed as YAs. The proposed study aims to develop and test the feasibility and acceptability of a novel behavioral symptom management intervention designed for survivors of YA cancer (cancer types: hematologic, breast, or gastrointestinal cancers, melanoma, or germ cell tumors). The hybrid intervention will include inperson, group sessions and an integrated mobile application. The intervention will provide peer support while also teaching skills to improve symptoms, symptom interference, and self-efficacy for symptom management. The mobile application will assist with symptom monitoring, home skills practice, and connecting with group members. The preliminary version of the intervention will be guided by the research team's prior work developing and testing symptom management interventions for cancer survivors, national guidelines for YA oncology, consultation with an expert advisory board, and input from patient (n=20) and provider N=10) stakeholders. The intervention will be further refined following review by patient user testers (n=10). Next, feasibility, acceptability, and distributions of change over time as well as relationships between outcome variables will be examined through a pilot randomized clinical trial of the developed intervention. Participants (N=60) will be randomized to intervention or wait-list control arms. Primary study outcomes are symptom (pain, fatigue, distress) severity and symptom interference. Self-efficacy and support will also be examined as mediators of change in outcome variables. The proposed study has the potential to make several significant contributions by targeting an underserved group of cancer survivors, addressing a critical gap in care, and addressing variables consistently linked to social, economic, and health burden for YAs. It will also provide important information about approaches to identify, recruit, and retain YA cancer survivors in research and provide pilot data for a larger trial.
Conditions
- Cancer
- Young Adult
- Pain
- Psychological Distress
- Fatigue
- Breast Cancer
- Melanoma
- Hematologic Cancer
- Germ Cell Tumor
- Endocrine Cancer
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| BEHAVIORAL | Behavioral Symptom Management for Young Adult Cancer Survivors | The intervention includes group sessions held over Zoom along with an integrated mobile application to provide participants with instruction in cognitive and behavioral strategies for managing symptoms (i.e., pain, fatigue, distress). The developed intervention includes 8 face-to-face group sessions (12 therapy hours). Sessions are delivered using a faded contact approach (i.e., sessions 1-6: weekly, sessions 7-8: biweekly). Participants receive secure access to a study-specific mobile application that includes: 1) audio and video files and brief text-based educational content reviewing strategies discussed during the groups; 2) the ability to self-monitor symptom severity; 3) the ability to connect with group members via a social networking platform; and 4) activity tracking synchronization. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2020-01-22
- Primary completion
- 2024-06-15
- Completion
- 2024-06-15
- First posted
- 2019-07-29
- Last updated
- 2025-06-29
- Results posted
- 2025-06-29
Locations
1 site across 1 country: United States
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04035447. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.