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Effectiveness of Specialised Paediatric Palliative Care (SPhAERA)

University of Zurich (UZH) logo

University of Zurich (UZH)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Paediatric Palliative Care

Treatments

Other: Specialised Paediatric Palliative Care (SPPC)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04236180
2019-INV-001

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study evaluates the effectiveness of an existing Specialised Paediatric Palliative Care programme and reports on its potential to improve patient-, family-, health professionals-, and healthcare-related outcomes. Data will be compared between an intervention and a comparison group.

Full description

The number of children and adolescents living with life-limiting conditions and potentially in need for specialised paediatric palliative care (SPPC) is rising. As a highly complex subfield of palliative care, paediatric palliative care focuses on the support and involvement of the entire family, and on the impact not only at the patient level, but also at the family and health systems level. Ideally, a specialised multiprofessional team fills the complex healthcare needs of children and their families. A consultative care model might be well-suited to address each family's most important needs. The question, however, of how SPPC is beneficial for whom and under what circumstances remain largely unanswered as validation of innovative care programmes in controlled studies is lacking.

This study's overall target is to evaluate the effectiveness of SPPC and to report on its potential to improve patient-, family-, health professional-, and healthcare-related outcomes. The primary objective is to explore how SPPC influences the quality of life (QOL) of caregivers, i.e. parents. Secondary objectives are to explore how SPPC influences the QOL of patients including their symptom severity and distress as well as the QOL of their siblings and of healthcare professionals not specialised in PPC. Further objectives are to determine whether the provision of SPPC reduces the utilisation of healthcare resources and direct and indirect health-related costs for families, and to evaluate implementation outcomes such as adoption, i.e., the uptake of SPPC.

This interventional multi-centre study will apply a hybrid design to determine the clinical effectiveness (comparative effectiveness research) of an existing SPPC programme, while gathering information on its delivery and potential implementation in a real-life situation.

This study will be conducted in compliance with the protocol, the current version of the Declaration of Helsinki, the ICH-GCP as well as all national legal and regulatory requirements.

Enrollment

70 patients

Sex

All

Ages

Under 18 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Children suffering from a life-limiting condition and potentially in need of SPPC, their parents and siblings as applicable will be eligible to enter the study, along with all HCP involved in their care at all study sites. The potential need for SPPC is defined per indication criteria based on the Zurich SPPC programme's guidelines:

  • Increase in (unplanned) hospital admissions during the last months
  • Medical adverse events from which the child is not recovering completelyIncreasing symptom burden
  • Unsatisfactory response to treatments
  • Conflicting treatment goals
  • Estimated life expectancy less than 6-12 months
  • Patient's/parents' wish for PC support

Inclusion criteria:

  • Children, aged 0-18 years, suffering from a life-limiting condition of various origins and potentially in need of SPPC (for Zurich, additionally enrolment in the SPPC programme)
  • Parents (mothers and fathers) of included children
  • Siblings, aged >8 years, of included families
  • All health care professionals involved in the care of included families
  • Proficiency in French or German language
  • Signed Informed Consent after being informed

Exclusion criteria:

  • Neonates with medical complications due to prematurity and/or birth complications and treated in a neonatal intensive care unit
  • Children with an estimated life expectancy of <48 hours

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

70 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention Group
Active Comparator group
Description:
Patients enrolled in the Specialised Paediatric Palliative Care (SPPC) programme at the University Children's Hospital Zurich.
Treatment:
Other: Specialised Paediatric Palliative Care (SPPC)
Comparison Group
No Intervention group
Description:
Patients treated at the Children's Hospital Aarau, University Children's Hospital Basel, and the University Hospital Inselspital Bern.

Trial contacts and locations

4

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Central trial contact

Karin Zimmermann, PhD RN; Eva Bergstraesser, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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