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RecruitingNCT07071038

Evaluating the Use of a Medication 'Switch' vs Guideline-directed Interventions for Relieving Side Effects of Aromatase Inhibitors Among Breast Cancer Patients

The 'SWIVEL' Study (Switch Vs Effects Relief): Effectiveness of a Medication 'Switch' vs Guideline-Directed Interventions for Relieving Side Effects of Aromatase Inhibitors Among Breast Cancer Patients

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
62 (estimated)
Sponsor
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Researchers have learned that about 50% of women do not finish the standard 5-year breast cancer treatment with an aromatase inhibitor. An aromatase inhibitor is hormone therapy that lowers the chance of breast cancer coming back (recurring) after surgery by blocking an enzyme in fat tissue called aromatase; aromatase changes other hormones in the body to estrogen. Women who do not complete the standard 5-year treatment are at higher risk of their cancer coming back. The goal of this research is to prevent breast cancer from coming back after surgery by helping women to stay on treatment with aromatase inhibitors. Researchers believe the best path to help women to stay on treatment is to create a better way to manage (control) side effects.

Detailed description

This is a two-arm, randomized-controlled trial with option for cross-over that compares the effectiveness of a 'switch' in hormonal therapy to guideline-directed intervention (GDI) for frontline management of side effects of aromatase inhibitors among breast cancer patients. Researchers plan to enroll post-menopausal patients with breast cancer who receive a first-time prescription for an aromatase inhibitor (AI). The anticipated enrollment is 124 participants to meet the goal of 62 evaluable participants. Baseline symptom burden and quality of life will be assessed by validated surveys prior to starting AI. After starting AI, participants will be contacted at 2 weeks, and then every 4-weeks to screen for the development of bothersome side effects using a validated screening tool. The screening tool (FACIT GP5) is a single-item questionnaire that asks participants to respond to the following: "I am bothered by side effects of treatment," with answers ranging from 'Not at all' (score 0) to 'Very much' (score 4). Participants who score either a 3 or 4 on the FACIT GP5 will be considered to have a positive screening result. They will be randomized 1:1 to either receiving a different AI ('switch') or guideline-directed intervention (GDI). A 'GDI Book' was created for this study and will serve as a reference for selecting GDI treatment. Participants who continue to have symptoms despite completing two lines of treatment within their assigned arm will be allowed to cross-over to the other treatment arm. Patients who are otherwise doing well in their treatment arm may stay in that treatment arm for the duration of the study. Cross-over is entirely optional. Participants who do not develop side effects will continue to be monitored on study for up to 6 months. Participants with side effects that do not meet criteria for randomization (FACIT GP5 scores of 1 or 2) will receive standard of care at the discretion their treating provider. Urine samples will be collected as a part of this study, to assess for adherence to endocrine therapy at the time of randomization, and at 3, 6 12 and 24 months after randomization. For participants that are not randomized, urine will be collected at 6, 12 and 24 months only. Urine samples will be collected during routine office visits when possible. Urine test results will remain anonymous (the treating provider will not know the results).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGSwitchParticipants in the switch arm will receive a new prescription for either anastrozole or exemestane at a dose of 1mg or 25mg daily, respectively. The choice of AI in the first line setting will be at the discretion of the treating oncologist. If side effects persist after the 1st line switch, the participant will have the option to switch to another AI not yet tried, or to tamoxifen at 20mg daily
OTHERGuideline Directed Intervention (GDI)Subjects in this group will receive a guideline-directed intervention "GDI" using medication and/or non-medication treatment options according to the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) supportive care guidelines. A GDI Book was created for this trial that lists treatment options and resources for each of the common side effects of hormonal therapy and is available for providers and staff to help select treatment options. For less common side effects with limited evidence-based options, treatment will be determined in collaboration with the treating provider and PI, using best available evidence.

Timeline

Start date
2025-10-17
Primary completion
2026-08-05
Completion
2027-08-05
First posted
2025-07-17
Last updated
2026-02-12

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07071038. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.