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Empathetic Communication Facilitation Program for Early Initiation of End-of-life Discussions

Y

Yosuke Uchitomi

Status

Completed

Conditions

Recurrent Cancer
Advanced Cancer
End of Life Care

Treatments

Behavioral: Mobile-based empathetic communication support program to promote ACP discussion

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05045040
20EA1010 (Other Grant/Funding Number)
J-SUPPORT2104

Details and patient eligibility

About

Background: The National Comprehensive Cancer Network Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology: palliative care recommends discussing advance care planning (ACP) when patients' estimated life expectancy is reduced from a year to months. Discussions about ACP focus on communication among patients, their caregivers, and healthcare providers to achieve cancer-related treatment and care consistent with the patient's preferences based on their values and goals. ACP can improve outcomes for patients and caregivers; however, provision of ACP to patients remain low. This may be because of the complexity of ACP in clinical practice.

A Question Prompt List (QPL) is a structured question list encouraging patients to put forward their queries to physicians and promote discussion between patients and physicians during medical consultations. Our preliminary study found that for patients with advanced cancer after standard chemotherapy, face-to-face interventions by nurses or clinical psychologists using a QPL about treatment and care, which is consistent with the patient's preferences based on their values and goals promoted empathetic communication between patients and their physicians. In recent years, however, ensuring adequate time during outpatient visits has become difficult due to increased numbers of outpatients and shortages of corresponding medical personnel. Therefore, intervention methods not restricted by location or time are needed. Thus, the investigators develop a mobile-based empathetic communication support program, including a QPL, to facilitate discussions about patients' values and goals with their physicians.

Purpose: This study examines whether a mobile-based empathetic communication support program, which intends to promote ACP discussions in earlier stages of advanced cancer treatment, improves such communication behaviors of patients with advanced cancer and their physicians.

Main contents of the intervention: Patients in the intervention group are provided a mobile-based empathetic communication support program-a mobile application (app). The app comprises a QPL (46 questions in eight categories) and questions about the patient's preferred treatment and end-of-life care based on their values and goals. After registering on the app, patients are first given a program overview and instructions for using the app. Then, they proceed with the content themselves, at home or anywhere else, at any time. Between app registration and the next outpatient visit, the patient is interviewed (by phone or in person) by a nurse or a clinical psychologist, who helps them prepare for the discussion with the physician and asks questions based on the patient's app responses for 30 minutes to an hour. During the outpatient visit, patients and their physicians are provided feedback based on the interview.

Study participants: Overall, 264 patients with advanced or recurrent cancer are recruited from four departments (respiratory medicine, gastroenterology, hepatobiliary medicine, and oncology) in the outpatient clinic of the National Cancer Center Hospital, Japan.

Outcome measurement: The primary outcome of this trial is the Reassurance and Emotional support score of physician behavior measured using the SHARE model at the first visit after the intervention. SHARE is a conceptual communication skills model comprising 26 items and four subscales, categorized as S: Supportive environment, H: How to deliver bad news, A: Additional information, and RE: Reassurance and Emotional support. Reassurance and Emotional support assesses physicians' behavior in providing reassurance and addressing patients' emotions with empathetic responses (e.g., remaining silent out of concern for patient's feelings or accepting patient's expression of emotions). The conversation between patients and the physicians is audio-recorded, and a third person's impression of the physician's communication behavior during the outpatient consultation is scored on a 5-point scale from 0: not applicable at all to 4: strongly applicable. Scoring will be conducted by multiple raters blinded to the assignment. Raters are trained in conversation analysis with a manual, and inter- and intra-rater agreements will be checked in advance.

Secondary outcomes are as follows: 1) the patient-physician behavioral assessment based on the conversation analysis manual, 2) number of conversations about ACP, 3) psychological distress, 4) quality of life, 5) medical care use, 6) app use, 7) feasibility of intervention program, 8) patients' satisfaction of the consultation, 9) care goals, and 10) preferred place for future care. The investigators chose these outcomes for their comparability with previous studies.

Full description

After obtaining written informed consent, patients who satisfy the criteria are assigned using a minimizing method to either an intervention or control group with stratification factors of the clinical department (respiratory medicine, gastroenterology, hepatobiliary medicine, and oncology), gender (male and female), and age (at age 64 years or younger/65 years or older). Within strata, patients are randomized to the intervention arm and the control arm in a 1:1 ratio.

Enrollment

264 patients

Sex

All

Ages

20+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients with unresectable (Union for International Cancer Control, UICC stage III or IV) or recurrent cancer.

  • Patients who are judged by the attending physician to meet the Surprise Question tool (Bernacki et al., 2019; Moss et al., 2010).

  • Patients aged 20 years or older.

  • Patients who have an ECOG Performance status 0-2.

    (0) Fully active and able to carry on all pre-disease performance without restriction. (1) Restricted in physically strenuous activity but ambulatory and able to engaged in light or sedentary work, e.g., light house or office work. (2) Ambulatory and capable of all self-care but unable to engage in any work activities; up and about more than 50% of waking hours. (3) Capable of only limited self-care; confined to a bed or chair for more than 50% of waking hours. (4) Completely disabled; cannot carry on any selfcare; completely confined to a bed or chair

  • Patients who have provided written consent to participate in the study

  • Patients who are able to read, write, and understand Japanese.

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients judged by the attending physician to have a serious cognitive decline, such as delirium or dementia
  • Patients with an estimated prognosis of three or fewer months
  • Patients who are otherwise judged by the attending physician to be unsuitable for this study
  • Patients who are in the middle of other psychological or communication support protocol interventions at the time of enrollment

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

264 participants in 2 patient groups

Mobile-based empathetic communication support program group
Experimental group
Description:
Patients are provided a mobile-based empathetic communication support program to promote ACP discussion for patients with advanced cancer and physicians. The experimental group also receives the usual care as is standard practice.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Mobile-based empathetic communication support program to promote ACP discussion
Usual care group
No Intervention group
Description:
Patients receive the usual care. The usual care includes routine medical treatment and care by physicians, nurses, pharmacists, and others as well as support from the palliative care team and others as per the patient's situation.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Kyoko Obama, RN, PhD; Maiko Fujimori, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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