Status
Conditions
About
This pilot study evaluates offering Head and Neck Cancer (HNC) patients a choice between standardized and individualized follow-up after HNC treatment. Following treatment, the patient will be educated about self-examination of the head and neck and which physical symptoms require a follow-up visit. After completing 1.5 years of uncomplicated guideline-prescribed follow-up, patients will be offered the option to switch to individualized follow-up through a tailored decision aid. Standardized follow-up entails continuing the guideline-prescribed follow-up schedule until five years after treatment. Individualized follow-up consists of follow-up visits based on symptoms and other needs at the patient's initiative. We hypothesize that giving patients the choice between standardized and individualized follow-up is feasible and saves costs while maintaining quality of life.
Full description
Background of the study:
Head and Neck Cancer (HNC) patients are currently enrolled in routine follow-up by medical specialists (standardized follow-up) for five years after primary treatment, according to the Dutch guideline Head and Neck Tumors. Similar recommendations are described in guidelines from the US and UK. The purposes for aftercare following cancer treatment as stated by the Health Council of the Netherlands are to address the effects of the disease and treatment itself, to detect new cancer manifestations, and to evaluate medical procedures to improve the quality of care.
The majority of HNC recurrences occur in the first 1.5-two years after treatment, and most of them cause clinical symptoms.It has not been proven that patients with recurrent disease discovered in the asymptomatic phase have better treatment options and life expectancy than patients who experience symptoms at the time of discovery.
Detecting second primary tumors (SPT) is an extra argument for routine follow-up as HNC patients are at greater risk of developing second primary cancers. SPTs are known to negatively affect overall long-term survival, especially those found outside the head and neck area. However, the way in which control visits are performed, namely physical examination of the head and neck, does not aim to identify SPTs elsewhere in the body. Because the incidence of SPTs remains stable over the years after treatment, detecting them would require life-long follow-up through diagnostic imaging.
Many patients express the concern that their cancer will progress or recur after treatment, also known as fear of cancer recurrence (FCR). FCR has a major impact on quality of life. It is not clear whether routine control visits exacerbate or relieve FCR, although previous research suggests that patient-led follow-up, in which prescheduled visits are replaced by patient-education and access to care by self-referral, does not influence FCR. Furthermore, patients have reported being anxious before scheduled control visits.
Overall, de-intensifying routine follow-up after primary HNC treatment seems to be sensible in the light of discovering recurrent or new cancers and will probably not affect FCR. However, reducing the frequency of prescheduled control visits for all HNC patients may deny the varying needs of individual patients. These needs include receiving more information about the treatment trajectory and being more involved in the decision-making process. Therefore, we have implemented a novel decision-aided follow-up program that allows HNC patients to choose between continuing standardized follow-up with prescheduled control visits, and individualized follow-up with symptom-based visits.
Objective of the study:
The aim of this project is to evaluate implementing the choice for individualized follow-up after head and neck cancer treatment at the Radboudumc and Rijnstate, the preferred partner of the Radboudumc regarding head and neck oncology. It will be investigated to what extent it is feasible to offer patients the choice for individualized follow-up, 1.5 years after completion of treatment. In addition, insight into (cost-)effectiveness is explored.
Primary research question: What is the feasibility of offering head and neck cancer patients the choice between standardized and individualized follow-up in a shared-decision making process supported by a decision-aid after completing 1.5 years of standardized follow-up?
Secondary research questions:
Study design:
This is an observational study (prospective cohort study) to evaluate offering a choice for individualized follow-up after treatment for HNC in Radboudumc and Rijnstate.
Study population:
Patients with a primary malignancy in the head and neck region (nose, nasopharynx, nasopharynx, oral cavity, pharynx, larynx) who have undergone treatment with curative intent.
Introducing individualized follow-up:
All head and neck cancer patients who are enrolled in standardized follow-up will be informed on the choice between standardized and individualized follow-up directly after treatment. Patients who have completed 1.5 years of standardized follow-up will be asked to make a choice between continuing standardized follow-up or switching to individualized follow-up. Patients will gain access to our online decision-aid to support the decision-making process. Their treating physician will explain all the details during a decision-making consult, after which a decision is made.
Including participants:
Patients who are eligible to participate in this study will be scheduled for an outpatient visit with an independent researcher 1.5 years after treatment, regardless of their choice for standardized or individualized follow-up. The researcher will explain the study and study-goals. Another appointment will be scheduled two weeks later to answer possible questions and, if the patient is willing to participate, obtain informed consent.
Ethical aspects:
We expect that patients who are given the opportunity to choose their own form of follow-up will not regret their decision. Nevertheless, participants always have the option to withdraw their decision at any time during the study, and afterwards. Participants in this study will not receive any special compensation or reward.
Data management:
All participants who have given informed consent are assigned an identification code. The identification code is copied on the code list. Identifiable data of the included study participants are kept in the code list (name, address, telephone number, medical file number (MDN), etc.). No traceable data are recorded in the electronic database (Castor EDC), only the participant's identification code. The code list is kept in a separate and secured digital environment.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
210 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Cecile van de Weerd, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal