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Objectives:
Specific Aim 1: Estimate the prevalence of head and neck lymphedema in patients who have been treated with surgery and/or radiation therapy (± chemotherapy) for oral cavity and oropharyngeal cancer.
Compare functional outcomes in patients with and without lymphedema using cross-sectional survey methods.
Specific Aim 2: Evaluate the effect of Complete Decongestive Therapy (CDT) provided in an outpatient setting or a home-based program in reducing lymphedema in patients previously treated with surgery and/or radiation therapy (± chemotherapy) for oral cavity and oropharyngeal cancer at 1, 3 and 6 months follow-up. Patient characteristics, treatment variables, and the health care environment will be analyzed as possible explanatory variables that influence the effect of lymphedema treatment.
Specific Aim 3: Evaluate the effect of lymphedema treatment on symptom burden, self-image, and functional performance status in patients previously treated with surgery and/or radiation therapy (± chemotherapy) for oral cavity and oropharyngeal cancer.
Full description
Screening for Part 1 of the Study:
The research staff will review your medical record to find out if you are possibly eligible to join Part 1 of this study. You will be eligible if you have had radiation and/or surgery (with or without chemotherapy) for mouth or throat cancer and it has been at least 1 month since your last treatment.
Part 1 of the Study:
If you choose to participate in Part 1 of this study, you will complete questionnaires. The questionnaires ask about your ability to swallow, eat, and speak, and about your quality of life, your satisfaction with your body, and any head and neck cancer symptoms. In total, the questionnaires should take less than 30 minutes to complete. You will also be asked about any symptoms of lymphedema. Your answers will be compared to the answers of patients who do and do not have lymphedema.
If you do not join Part 2 of this study, your participation in this study will be over after you complete the questionnaires.
Screening for Part 2 of the Study:
If you have head and neck lymphedema, you may also be eligible for Part 2 of the study. You will have "screening tests" to help the doctor decide if you are eligible for Part 2 of the study:
The research staff will discuss the Part 2 screening test results with you, if applicable. Signing this consent form does not mean that you will be able to participate in Part 2 of this study. If the screening tests show that you are not eligible for Part 2, you will only be enrolled in Part 1.
Part 2 of the Study:
If you are found to be eligible to take part in Part 2 of this study, you will first meet with a certified lymphedema therapist in the Head and Neck Center. During this visit, the therapist will perform a lymphedema exam. This involves checking your neck, face, and mouth for swelling, and looking at your skin to check for any open wounds or infection. The therapist will also interview you about how well you are able to swallow, eat, speak, and perform other normal activities of daily living (performance status). This visit should last about 1 hour.
All Part 2 participants will be offered CDT. It will be your choice if you would like to receive a "full" CDT program or a "modified" CDT program. You may also choose to decline both of these CDT options and stay on study for follow-up.
CDT has 4 steps that are designed to help the lymph fluids flow:
All 4 steps are done in both the full and modified CDT programs. The difference between the full and modified programs is that the full program includes 10 CDT sessions at the clinic, in addition to a self-managed CDT program at home. Otherwise, the 4 steps of CDT are the same in both the clinic sessions and home sessions.
Full CDT Program:
If you choose to receive the full CDT program, you will come to the clinic and receive CDT as described above, Monday through Friday for 2 weeks of intensive outpatient therapy. The CDT will be done by the lymphedema therapist. Each session will last about 1 hour.
During your last 2 treatment visits (Visits 9 and 10), you will be taught how to do the CDT steps at home. You will then perform the CDT steps at home, every day for the next 3 months.
Modified CDT Program:
If you choose to receive the modified CDT program, you will come to the clinic for 1-2 training sessions taught by the lymphedema therapist. Each training session will last about 1 hour, and you will be taught how to do the CDT steps at home. You will then perform the CDT steps at home, every day for the next 3 months.
Option for No CDT:
If you decline both study treatment options, you will not receive CDT. You will stay on study to receive follow-up as described below.
Follow-Up in Part 2 of the Study:
All Part 2 study participants will have 3 follow-up visits. If you received the full or modified CDT program, the visits will be at 1, 3, and 6 months after your first lymphedema training session. If you declined the CDT, the visits will be at 1, 3, and 6 months after your study interview.
At these visits, you will complete the same questionnaires as you did for screening in Part 1 of the study. You will also have a lymphedema exam and interview by the lymphedema therapist, like you did at the beginning of Part 2 of the study.
If you received the full or modified CDT program, a study staff member will also call you at 2, 6, and 9 weeks after your first lymphedema training session, to ask how the home CDT program is going.
Length of Part 2:
If you are in Part 2, your participation in this study will be over after your 6-month follow-up visit.
This is an investigational study. CDT is commonly used to treat all types of lymphedema, including head and neck lymphedema. This study (Part 2) is designed to collect more data on whether CDT can help to control head and neck lymphedema and its symptoms. Part 1 is also designed to collect data related to head and neck lymphedema.
Up to 500 patients will take part in this study. All will be enrolled at M. D. Anderson.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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