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Decision Aid to Support Advanced Cancer Patients (PETUPAL)

U

University Hospital Heidelberg

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Advanced Cancer

Treatments

Other: Decision Aid

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04606238
UHHeidelberg

Details and patient eligibility

About

To support advanced cancer patients, for whom standard therapy is no longer available, and their oncologists in therapy decisions, the investigators aim to develop a decision-making aid (DA) in a multi-phased bicentric study. The DA aims to help patients to understand better risks and benefits of available treatment options including the options of standard palliative care, off-label drug use within an individual treatment plan and involvement in early clinical trials.

Full description

Decisions about the provision of anticancer therapy and the initiation of palliative care in the last months of life are frequent and challenging in clinical practice. Research indicates that there is considerable heterogeneity regarding clinical practice in this context and that oncologists' values influence treatment decisions, as well as whether or not patients participate in these decisions. While there is evidence that seriously ill patients differ in their choices between treatment options compared to healthy persons, as well as in their evaluation of treatment goals and related care settings, there is a lack of analysis regarding criteria relevant to patients in the last 6 months of life, when assessing the benefit of anticancer treatment and palliative care. Yet, in decisions about anticancer treatment and involvement of palliative care, patients' preferences and values are of particular importance since anticancer treatment - while associated with high expectations for a positive effect - often has only marginal influence on prognosis towards the end of a cancer trajectory and sometimes forestalls choosing a palliative care setting or coping with the disease. Hence, the decision has a high impact on patients' last months of life. Involving patients more actively in the planning of their care has been on the agenda for more than a decade, but the implementation of this idea in routine clinical practice remains a challenge. Instead, oncologists often avoid prognosticating and eliciting patient preferences for or against anticancer treatment and values in the last phase of life. One important reason is that oncologists report discussions about ending anticancer therapy the most challenging communication task.

To support advanced cancer patients, for whom standard therapy is no longer available, and their oncologists in therapy decisions, the investigators aim to develop a decision-making aid (DA) in a multi-phased bicentric study. The DA aims to help patients to understand better risks and benefits of available treatment options including the options of standard palliative care, off-label drug use within an individual treatment plan and involvement in early clinical trials.

Methods and analysis:

In phase I, the DA will be developed after exploration of decisional needs of patients and views of health care providers based on face-to face interviews and focus groups discussions. Subsequently, the DA will be alpha-tested and redrafted, as necessary, in phase II. In phase III, the DA will be (1) beta-tested with patients and oncologists and (2), and assessed by experts. In the last project phase, the investigators will run a pre-post design study with doctor-patient-encounters to access improvements on primary study outcome, i.e. patients' level of decisional conflict. In addition, the user acceptance will be tested.

Enrollment

70 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Patients:

  • adult patients with incurable, stage IV disease in an advanced treatment stage (prognosis <12 months and/or standard palliative care);
  • adequate level of German language;
  • willing and able to give informed consent for participation in the study.

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients that already are under standard palliative care only;
  • are cognitive impaired;
  • have extreme anxiety or distress;
  • have a severe comorbid illness excluding antitumor treatment.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Sequential Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

70 participants in 2 patient groups

Group without DA
No Intervention group
Description:
adult patients with incurable, stage IV disease (Prostate-, Breast-, Pancreatic-, Stomach- and Colorectal cancer) in an advanced treatment stage.
Group with DA
Other group
Description:
adult patients with incurable, stage IV disease (Prostate-, Breast-, Pancreatic-, Stomach- and Colorectal cancer) in an advanced treatment stage.
Treatment:
Other: Decision Aid

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Eva Winkler, Prof.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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