Trials / Recruiting
RecruitingNCT05898789
Virtual Rehabilitation for Cancer Survivors
Pragmatic Hybrid Type 1 Effectiveness-implementation (E-I) Trial of a Virtual Cancer Rehabilitation Program
- Status
- Recruiting
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 388 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- University Health Network, Toronto · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Not accepted
Summary
Pragmatic hybrid type 1 effectiveness-implementation (E-I) trial of a virtual cancer rehabilitation program: The study team will conduct a multi-center hybrid type I effectiveness-implementation study to examine the clinical effectiveness and implementation potential of an 8-week multidimensional virtual cancer rehabilitation intervention (CaRE@Home) for cancer survivors with identified cancer-related impairments on level of overall disability (primary outcome) and patient reported physical and social functioning, anxiety, work status, quality of life, and physiologic changes (secondary outcomes). The study team will conduct a multi-centre pragmatic randomized controlled trial (RCT) (Vancouver, Toronto, Saint John and St. John's) to evaluate effectiveness and using the CIFR, the study team will identify potential factors that may affect successful implementation and integration of CaRE@Home in different cancer settings.
Detailed description
Comprehensive multidimensional rehabilitation programs that include both exercise and self management education have the potential to concurrently improve a wide range of post treatment side-effects and overall patient function. In 2017, the Cancer Rehabilitation and Canadian Cancer Rehabilitation (CanRehab) Team: Improving the systematic identification, management, and treatment of the adverse effects of cancer. Survivorship program at Princess Margaret Cancer Centre launched an evidence driven group based multidimensional Cancer Rehabilitation and Exercise program (CaRE@ELLICSR) for patients who have identified cancer-related impairments. The 8-week program integrates a number of evidence-based techniques to sustain behavioural change and consists of weekly1-hr group exercise classes followed by 1-hr self-management skills education delivered by a rehabilitation expert. Participants return for follow-up at 3 and 6 months post-intervention to monitor progress and adapt exercise as needed. CaRE@ELLICSR has resulted in improvements in overall levels of disability, social functioning, distress, and physical activity. Program satisfaction is high, and wait times are within the target of \<1 month. However, access is an issue with \~50% of referred patients unable to participate due to travel distance, transportation costs or competing obligations (unpublished data). To increase access, a virtual on-line version of the CaRE program (CaRE@Home) was developed using a series of iterative steps proposed by the NCI Research-Tested Intervention Programs. The CaRE@Home program is currently undergoing single-group feasibility pilot testing (completion Oct 2019, funded by Ontario Institute for Cancer Research). Feasibility outcomes collected to date demonstrate high program acceptability with 95% of referred patients enrolled and 94% program adherence. The final steps of this process are to formally evaluate effectiveness and prepare for real-world implementation, which is the focus of Project Two of this application. If effective, the virtual CaRE@Home program has the potential to extend access to critical cancer rehabilitation services to a greater number of cancer survivors in need. It also has immense potential to be adapted and scaled to other centres that lack the resources required to deliver in-house cancer rehabilitation services. In Project Two the study team will conduct a multi-center hybrid type I effectiveness-implementation study to examine the clinical effectiveness and implementation potential of CaRE@Home for cancer survivors with identified cancer-related impairments. Principal Research Aims: Aim 2.1: Test the effectiveness of CaRE@Home vs. usual care (UC) on disability (primary outcome) and patient reported and physiological outcomes (secondary outcomes) at 3-months post-intervention. Aim 2.2: Conduct a descriptive implementation-focused process evaluation to inform future implementation efforts Methods The project is a hybrid type 1 effectiveness-implementation (E-I) study. The aim of hybrid trials are to better align research and practice and to provide a pathway for rapidly moving knowledge from research to implementation. In hybrid type 1 studies, the primary aim is to determine effectiveness in the setting where it will be implemented and the secondary aim is to better understand the context for implementation. This methodology promotes the study of implementation as early as possible in the research process and can serve a dual purpose in helping to explain effectiveness results and informing future implementation efforts. Aim 2.1: Effectiveness evaluation of CaRE@Home (months 36-58) Design: The study team will conduct a multi-centre pragmatic RCT (Vancouver, Toronto, Saint John and St. John's) to evaluate effectiveness. Clinical effectiveness studies place a greater emphasis on external validity and generalizability than efficacy trials and typically include heterogeneous patient populations and settings. Participants will be randomized into CaRE@Home or UC. Recruitment and Data Collection: Eligible participants will be identified by their oncology team, and provided information about the study along with contact information for the local study team. Participants can be recruited to the study through the following methods: 1. Study information flyers will also be available in relevant clinic areas. An email address or telephone number will be available on information flyers to connect participants to study staff. Interested participants may use the contact information in the study flyer to contact the research assistant for more information. 2. Eligible participants will be identified by their oncology or healthcare team, and asked if they would be willing to speak with or be contacted by the study team at a later time. Those who indicate interest will be approached/contacted by study staff who will provide additional information on the trial and answer any questions. 3. Study flyers will also be placed in the clinics at Mt. Sinai hospital, Sunnybrook Hospital, Women's College Hospital, St. Joseph's hospital, and St. Michael's hospital to help increase recruitment. Interested participants may use the contact information in the study flyer to contact the research assistant for more information. 4. Further, participants may be recruited to the CaRE@Home study via the REACH system. The aim of the REACH system is to systematically screen for and identify cancer-related impairments, and link patients to rehabilitation resources to manage these impairments. As REACH is a clinical tool being implemented as part of patients' routine clinical care, research consent is not required for patients to register and use the REACH system. Once a patient has registered to the REACH system and completed their first set of symptoms screening questions, patients will be presented with a consent page on the system. The REACH Research Consent page (Appendix #2.1) will ask patients three separate questions, of which the third question is the permission to contact for future research. A report called "REACH - Data Export - Research Consent to Contact" will be generated to list the names and email addresses of patients who responded yes to Question #3. From the report generated, participants who were provided with a recommendation on REACH to follow up with their oncology team for possible referral to rehabilitation programs within that last 6 months for specific impairments (fatigue, activities of daily living, return to work, shoulder/neck impairment) would be sent an email invitation by UHN REACH team, inviting them to consider the CaRE@Home study in their province. 5. Physiatry at Arthur J. E. Child Comprehensive Cancer Centre in Calgary, AB will identify eligible participants for the study who are willing to be contacted by the study team. These individuals will be referred to the study team who will contact them to provide more information. 6. Social media ads posted on UHN social media accounts relevant to research and social media accounts of affiliated organizations with approval. Interested participants may use the contact information in the posts to contact the research team for more information. Note: External self-referring study participants who wish to participate at UHN will be asked for their health card information, DOB and Name of family physician in order to be registered into the EPIC health care system as per UHN policy. Potential participants recruited by these methods will then be pre-screened either in-person or by telephone. Those who are eligible will be consented via REDCap. Site-specific screening logs will be maintained. At the baseline assessment, participants will provide consent and complete PRO and physiological measures (see below) with a trained assessor. Following the assessment, the research assistant will obtain the randomization assignment. Those assigned to CaRE@Home will be registered into the CaRE@Home platform. Follow-up assessment for both groups will occur at 8-weeks (T2 immediate post intervention) and 3 months post-intervention (T3). The CaRE@Home group will have an additional 6 months post-intervention (T4) to assess maintenance. Randomization: Permuted block randomization, with stratification by center and on/finished treatment will allocate participants to either CaRE@Home or UC. Randomization will be computer-generated and managed by the Department of Biostatistics at Princess Margaret Cancer Centre. Description of Study Arms: i) Care@Home is an 8-week program comprised of: 1) weekly e-modules providing interactive education to promote self-management skills; 2) individualized progressive exercise prescription supported with mobile application (PhysitrackTM); 3) wearable technology (FitbitTM) to track activity and sleep; and 4) weekly brief telephone counselling with a member of the rehabilitation team (see Appendix 4 CaRE@Home program elements). Informed by behavior change theory, the program elements aim to provide patients with the knowledge and tools needed to reach and maintain their wellness and exercise goals. Training for health professionals: In person assessments and weekly phone calls will be delivered by a rehabilitation/exercise professional who has experience working with cancer survivors. The exercise professionals will receive comprehensive training and ongoing supervision. Training will be provided by a Motivational Interviewing Network of Trainers certified trainer (Dr. M. Obadia). The training will be videotaped and an online tool box with training resources will be developed to support future scalability. ii) UC will receive usual care and will be asked to complete in-person assessment at T2 and T3. Following T3 assessment, the UC group will be offered the CaRE@Home program. Data analysis: Demographic and clinical information across all time points will be summarised using descriptive statistics and plotted across all time points. Effectiveness will be assessed on the full set of consented participants in accordance with the intention to treat principle. The primary outcome is the difference in WHODAS 2.0 mean score between CaRE@Home and UC at T3. Differences on secondary outcomes at T3 will also be compared between the two treatment arms using paired t test or paired Wilcoxon rank-sum test. Maintenance of treatment gains in the CaRE@Home group will be analyzed at T4. An estimate of the effect size and parameters and corresponding confidence intervals will be calculated between groups at T3 and over time (within groups). Variability of the main and interaction effects will be examined on the primary clinical outcome (WHODAS 2.0) and each of the secondary outcomes using separate longitudinal analysis models such as mixed model regression and generalized estimating equation models. Sensitivity analysis will be conducted, adjusting for important clinical factors using the regression model. Finally, a cost-utility analysis will be undertaken to estimate the incremental cost per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) of the intervention arm compared to the control arm. Sample Size: Our sample size calculations is based on 80% power with a two-sided alpha-level at 0.05 and an estimated effect size of 0.4 standard deviation of the primary endpoint. Assuming attrition of up to 30% and adherence to be 80%, 388 patients will be recruited (or 194 patients per arm). The number of potentially eligible patients across sites is estimated to be 170 patients per month. Based on proposed staffing per site, a maximum of 20 patients can be enrolled per month in Toronto/Vancouver and 10 per site in NB/NFLD. Enrollment is estimated to take 6-7 months. The study team will use multiple strategies to promote retention and prevent attrition. Aim 2.2: Implementation-focused Process Evaluation (months 30-52) Design: In order to inform the implementation of CaRE@Home, a process evaluation will be conducted and guided by the RE-AIM framework\[88\]. The CFIR will be used to examine context and understand relevant barriers and facilitators across and within CanRehab sites. See Table 3 for Implementation Framework/Process Evaluation Questions and Tools. Data Collection Tools: Data tools will include interviews/focus groups, surveys, screening logs, observational notes, technical reports, infrastructure review to inform costs as well as staffing and infrastructure requirements. The study team will triangulate the data from the different quantitative and qualitative sources to answer questions developed based on elements of the selected frameworks and summarize our findings. Data Analysis: Descriptive variables will be presented as means, distributions, and proportions with differences between subgroups compared. Qualitative information from open-ended survey questions, interviews, and research log entries will be transcribed and analyzed using common deductive qualitative analysis techniques\[133\] following the CFIR qualitative data analysis templates. Following this, all transcripts will be coded and additional inductive codes will be added.
Conditions
- Breast Cancer, Stage 0
- Colorectal Cancer Stage I
- Head and Neck Cancer Stage I
- Lymphoma
- Breast Cancer Stage I
- Breast Cancer Stage II
- Breast Cancer Stage III
- Colorectal Cancer Stage II
- Colorectal Cancer Stage III
- Head and Neck Cancer Stage II
- Head and Neck Cancer Stage III
- Lymphoproliferative Disorders
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| BEHAVIORAL | CaRE@Home intervention | participants randomized to the intervention arm will complete a virtual 8 week exercise and education program. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2023-07-07
- Primary completion
- 2026-06-30
- Completion
- 2026-11-30
- First posted
- 2023-06-12
- Last updated
- 2026-02-25
Locations
1 site across 1 country: Canada
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05898789. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.