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This study seeks to test the efficacy of a psychosocial intervention to empower advanced cancer patients and their caregivers and improve their quality of life (QOL). The program, called NextSTEPS, provides skills training in six domains that are central to patient and caregiver QOL: self-care, stress management, symptom management, effective communication, problem-solving, and social support.
Full description
In this study, 200 advanced cancer patients who are within one month of treatment initiation (baseline) and their caregivers will complete baseline surveys and be randomized to NextSTEPS or a usual medical care (UMC) condition. In addition to UMC, patients and caregivers in the NextSTEPS condition will each receive an intervention manual and six weekly 45-minute telephone counseling sessions with a trained interventionist. Patients and caregivers in both the NextSTEPS and UMC conditions will complete follow-up surveys at 8 weeks (primary endpoint), and 4 and 6 months post-baseline (secondary endpoints).
The specific aims are to:
Secondary/exploratory aims and hypotheses are to:
Examine the effects of the NextSTEPS intervention on Self Determination Theory (SDT) constructs. We hypothesize that NextSTEPS will enhance patient and caregiver competence, autonomy, and relatedness.
Test whether the SDT constructs of competence, autonomy and relatedness mediate the effects of NextSTEPS on patient/caregiver outcomes as hypothesized.
Explore whether sociodemographic (e.g., age, gender), medical (e.g., disease stage, comorbidities), and relationship factors (e.g., whether the caregiver is a spouse/partner or other family member) moderate the effects of NextSTEPS on patient/caregiver competence, autonomy, and relatedness.
NextSTEPS fills an important service gap by providing education, skills training, and support to advanced cancer patients and their caregivers shortly after diagnosis. Home-based telephone delivery will facilitate dissemination and outreach. By empowering families with the skills they need to coordinate care and meet the challenges of advanced cancer together, NextSTEPS holds great promise for improving patient and caregiver QOL, and the quality of palliative and supportive care in cancer.
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242 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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