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Breast cancer is the most frequent cancer in women in France, with an estimated 50,000 new cases each year. Prognosis is good, with a standardized survival rate of 85% at 5 years from diagnosis. Half of the women affected are of working age. Return to work after breast cancer faces barriers pertaining to the patients and their environment. There are social disparities in employment. Women with a lesser education and older women are at higher risk to lose their job. No intervention, to date, has demonstrated its effectiveness to facilitate return to work and reduce social disparities in employment after breast cancer. Current limitations of the interventions are to be over-medicalized and hospital-centered, to lack of theoretical foundations, and to be at risk of implementation failure. In a previous phase of the FASTRACS project, an intersectoral Community Advisory Board involving the different categories of stakeholders was launched to perform a needs analysis and build the logic model of the FASTRACS intervention with the Intervention Mapping protocol.
The main objective of the FASTRACS intervention is to facilitate sustained return to work (RTW) after breast cancer. Secondary objectives are to improve work-related quality of life and to decrease social disparities in employment after breast cancer.
Eligible patients are women: (1) aged between 18 and 55 years; (2) in paid employment; (3) diagnosed with a locally invasive non-metastatic first breast cancer (4) treated by surgery and chemotherapy in an adjuvant or neoadjuvant situation. Recruitment will take place in six investigating centres (centre hospitalier Lyon Sud, hôpital de la Croix-Rousse, hôpital femme-mère-enfant, centre Léon Bérard, hôpital Jean Mermoz, Clinique Charcot), after surgery and before the beginning of the chemotherapy. Women will be randomized between 2 groups (intervention vs control) with a stratification on the including centre, age, and socioprofessional category.
The intervention is founded on a multilevel logic model addressing the social determinants of health. It is composed of 4 successive steps during which 4 tools will be used. The first step involves an interview at the end of chemotherapy with a nurse, during which the patient is given a guide to returning to work. The second step is a transitional consultation in the month following the end of radiotherapy (or chemotherapy for patients without radiotherapy), with the general practitioner (GP), with a checklist designed to individualise the patient's care. The third step is a pre-RTW visit to the occupational physician (OP) at a time deemed appropriate by the patient and her GP, with a checklist to facilitate the accomodation of the workstation and the job retention strategy. The fourth and final step will only occur for patients who have not returned to work 10 months after inclusion, and will involve an interview with an OP specialised in return-to-work (RTW) coordination. The last tool is an employer's guide that will be given by the patient to her OP and her manager, with practical advice for managers and colleagues to facilitate the RTW process.
The evaluation of the intervention will be performed with mixed-methods by a realist randomized controlled trial including 210 patients in each group. For the effect evaluation, the primary outcome is a composite endpoint including: (a) a sustained return to work 12 months after oncological treatments (OT) ; and (b) the number of days on sick leave 12 months after oncological treatments. Secondary outcomes will include the patients' perspective (quality of life, anxiety, depression, RTW self-efficacy, social support, physical activity, work role functioning, work conditions), process outcomes (transition visit with the GP, pre RTW visit with the OP, other visits), and implementation outcomes (reach and use of the intervention tools).
Expected public health impact: Provided it is acceptable, effective and sustainable, the innovative intervention developed in this project is likely to decrease the impact of breast cancer on employment, and to decrease social disparities in employment after breast cancer. According to the mechanisms activated in each context under study (centres, workplaces), it could be scaled-up but also adapted to fit the needs of patients with other cancers or other chronic health conditions.
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420 participants in 2 patient groups
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Coordination FASTRACS-RCT; Jean-Baptiste FASSIER, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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