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| ID | Type | Description | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| 119700-RSGHP-10-107-01-CPHPS | Other Grant/Funding Number | American Cancer Society |
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| Name | Class |
|---|---|
| American Cancer Society, Inc. | OTHER |
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The main purpose of this study is to research the comparative effectiveness of two potential models of health care to deliver preventive services and chronic care management to the growing population of adult and pediatric survivors of childhood cancer. The central hypothesis is that survivorship care delivered by a subject's primary care doctor after the subject is empowered with individualized follow-up recommendations prepared by a cancer survivor specialist is similar to care provided in a specialty survival clinic.
Although 80% of children with cancer will be cured of their primary disease, at least 70% of survivors will develop chronic medical, neurocognitive, and/or emotional conditions as a complication of their therapy. Most of these conditions are amenable to prevention and early intervention. In response, the Institute of Medicine strongly advised that all cancer patients should receive survivorship care with the following key elements: 1) a summary of previous cancer therapy, 2) individualized life-long screening for potential adverse therapy-related effects, and 3) education regarding desirable health behaviors. However, less than 30% of survivors receive recommended care. There is a tremendous need for research that addresses how to best implement evidence-based recommendations for this population.
Two main health care delivery models have been advocated for survivorship care, but no comparison studies exist. The first model is a specialty survivor clinic, usually at a cancer treatment center. The second model, termed the empowered primary care model, involves patients receiving an individualized "prescription" for follow-up care prepared by a cancer survivor specialist to be implemented by the primary care doctor. Each model poses unique strengths and weaknesses. Specialty survivor clinics can be expensive and geographically inaccessible, can cause anxiety and stress to patients, and can accommodate limited numbers of patients. Primary care doctors may lack adequate expertise and time for these complex patients. Unless we know how these approaches compare with regard to quality of care and risks, advocates and policy makers will be stymied in their efforts to support the health needs of cancer survivors. This study seeks to compare subjects randomized to the empowered primary care model vs. a specialty survivor clinic.
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| empowered primary care model | Experimental | patients receive an individualized "prescription" for survivorship care prepared by a cancer survivor specialist to be implemented by the primary care doctor |
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| specialty survivor clinic | Experimental | patient attends a specialty survivor clinic at Yale for survivorship care |
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| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| empowered primary care model | Other | mode of survivorship care |
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| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| adherence to guideline-recommended surveillance (medical record abstraction) | quality of survivorship care | 12 months post-intervention |
| number of newly-identified late effects of therapy (medical record abstraction) | quality of survivorship care | 12 months post-intervention |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| anxiety (Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI)) | adverse effects of receiving survivorship care | 12 months post-intervention |
| depression (Behavior Assessment System for Children, 2nd Edition (BASC-2)) |
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Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
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| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Nina S Kadan-Lottick, MD, MSPH | Yale University | Principal Investigator |
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D009369 | Neoplasms |
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| specialty survivor clinic |
| Other |
mode of survivorship care |
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adverse effects of receiving survivorship care
| 12 months post-intervention |
| post-traumatic stress symptoms (Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Reaction Index (PTSD-RI)) | adverse effects of receiving survivorship care | 12 months post-intervention |
| level of physical activity (2008 questionnaires of the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS)) | adherence to desirable health behaviors | 12 months post-intervention |
| avoidance of tobacco (2008 questionnaires of the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS)) | adherence to desirable health behaviors | 12 months post-intervention |
| intake of at least five servings per day of fruits and vegetables (2008 questionnaires of the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS)) | adherence to desirable health behaviors | 12 months post-intervention |