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About
It is assumed that an early palliative care structured by SENS (a systematic, problem-based assessment system) in addition to standard oncology care compared with standard oncology care alone relieves distress in patients with advanced cancer at the end of life.
The primary objective of the trial is to determine the effectiveness of early palliative care intervention, structured by SENS (a systematic, problem-based assessment system) in addition to standard oncology care, compared with standard oncology care alone to relieve distress a) in patients with advanced cancer until death, and b) in caregivers. The secondary objectives are to determine whether the introduction of SENS improves quality of life, prolongs overall survival, ameliorates distress of caregivers, reduces health care costs and medical resource utilization (less aggressive treatment in the last weeks of life).
Full description
Background
Intervention (performed by specialist palliative care teams): The structured approach intervention is based on NCCN Practice Guidelines for Palliative Care, part of Gold Standard Framework (GSF) and the WHO definition of Palliative Care. It supports the assessment of areas and complexity of concerns from the patient perspective, determining priorities and structures the support needed. SENS stands for: Symptom-management, instruction for self administration of medication etc. End of life decision-making: explicit definition of own goals and priorities; Network organization including anticipatory planning of emergency situations
Support of the carers: implementation of support systems for the caring family members
The standardized intervention (based on prepared educational tool kit including a patient prompt sheet) is performed by a palliative care physician and nurse collaboratively after randomization and consent. The intervention is undertaken only once (after baseline questionnaire and before first follow-up questionnaire). There is a total of 4 questionnaires in the first 6 months. In addition, patients will receive usual oncology care throughout the study period (see below).
Usual Oncology care (performed by oncological out- and inpatient clinics): Usual care incorporates a routine assessment according to national protocols, which assesses overall symptoms and current complaints from other domains. Participants assigned to usual care may meet with the palliative care service on request according to established practice but without following the SENS approach (subgroup analysis will be performed).
Main eligibility criteria
Patients >/= 18 years of age who signed informed consent with understanding of the study procedures and the investigational nature of the study with one of the following cancer types:
Exclusion criteria
Outcomes Primary outcomes
Objective
The primary objective of the trial is to determine the effectiveness of early palliative care structured by SENS (a systematic, problem-based assessment system) in addition to standard oncology care compared with standard oncology care alone to relieve distress in patients with advanced cancer at the end of life.
The secondary objectives are to determine whether the introduction of SENS improves quality of life and prolongs overall survival in these patients, reduces health care costs and medical resource utilization.
The primary objective of the nested qualitative study is to identify characteristics and reasons for the added value as well as failure of a compulsory problem-based assessment system (SENS) in advanced cancer patients.
Methods
Design Multicenter, two-arm, parallel-group, randomized-controlled trial with a nested qualitative study (content analysis)
Experimental arm:
Palliative care with a structured approach (SENS model) based on the bio-psycho-social-spiritual model of care. The approach supports the assessment of areas and complexity of concerns from the patient perspective, determines the priority and structures the support needed. The intervention is performed by palliative care physicians and nurses collaboratively.
Control arm: Patients in the usual care group will receive routine oncology care throughout the study.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
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150 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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