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Navigated Early Survivorship Transition in Patients With Newly Diagnosed Cancer and Their Caregivers

Navigated Early Survivorship Transition in Improving Survivorship Care Planning in Patients With Newly Diagnosed Cancer and Their Caregivers (NEST)

Status
Terminated
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02440737
Acronym
NEST
Enrollment
67
Registered
2015-05-12
Start date
2015-05-31
Completion date
2018-12-31
Last updated
2019-10-18

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Cancer

Keywords

Newly diagnosed, Cancer patient, Caregiver, Support person

Brief summary

This pilot clinical trial studies the Navigated Early Survivorship Transition (NEST) intervention in improving survivorship care planning in patients with newly diagnosed cancer and their caregivers. A survivorship care planning session (SCPS) delivered to survivors and their primary caregivers may improve psychosocial well-being, patient and caregiver engagement, and adherence to treatment and follow-up recommendations. It is not yet known whether a NEST intervention or usual care is better in improving survivorship care planning in patients with newly diagnosed cancer.

Detailed description

PRIMARY OBJECTIVES: I. In a new model of survivorship care planning, planning started within the first two months of therapy, followed by additional survivorship care planning at the end of therapy or 6 months post diagnosis, evaluate the proportion of eligible survivors and participating caregivers who complete the survivorship care planning. II. In a feasibility study of survivors and their identified support caregivers (70 survivors with or with a participating caregiver at VICC and 70 survivors with or without a participating caregiver at MMC), evaluate psychosocial well-being, engagement, resource utilization and adherence to recommended treatment and follow-up guidelines. III. Assess the outcomes of survivors and participating caregivers treated at VICC and MMC to further individualize survivorship planning that will incorporate the optimal timing and content together with socioeconomic and cultural considerations. The pillars of this novel intervention (i.e., survivorship care planning, psychosocial assessment and patient engagement) are responsive to the recommendations of the IOM. The project proposed herein will build directly upon our work in the P20 grant and will set the stage for the planned R01 RCT, which would be directly responsive to NCI PAR 12-275. The ultimate aim is to inform best practices in survivorship planning in community and academic cancer centers, serving diverse, including underserved minority populations, with sufficient power to detect differences between treatment groups. OUTLINE: Patients and their caregivers participate in an upfront survivorship care planning session. Patients and their caregivers meet with the Survivorship Nurse Practitioner (NP) at the VICC or the Nurse Navigator (NN) at MMC during an initial survivorship care planning session (30 minutes total) to identify resources that may be needed during and following therapy. The patient and their caregiver then meet together with the NP or NN (60 minutes total) to discuss the planned therapy, the expected course of recovery and recommendations for follow-up, and are provided with a preliminary survivorship care plan (SCP). Caregivers also receive the National Cancer Institute publication, When Someone You Love is Being Treated for Cancer. Patients and their caregivers proceed with therapy. At the end of therapy, patients and their caregivers schedule a one-hour visit with the NP or NN for a booster survivorship care planning session (SCPS). At this booster session, they will review the questionnaires and receive an individualized final SCPS and the REACH for Survivorship handbook. After completion of treatment for cancer, patients and their caregivers complete follow up assessments at the end of treatment and again two months after the end of treatment.

Interventions

OTHEREducational Intervention

Receive publication, When Someone You Love is Being Treated for Cancer, a preliminary individualized Survivorship Care Plan (SCP), a final individualized SCP, and the REACH for Survivorship handbook.

Complete Survivorship Care Planning session at end of treatment

PROCEDUREPsychosocial Assessment and Care

Undergo the NEST intervention

OTHERQuestionnaire Administration

Ancillary studies

Sponsors

National Cancer Institute (NCI)
CollaboratorNIH
Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NA
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* Newly diagnosed adult cancer patients from VICC and MMC * Caregiver of enrolled newly diagnosed adult cancer patients from VICC and MMC * No prior history of malignancy other than non-melanoma skin cancer * Planned treatment for stages I - III cancer * Treatment expected to be completed within 12 months * English speaking

Exclusion criteria

* Prior history of malignancy other than non-melanoma skin cancer * Patients treated with surgery alone will not be included * Patients whose treatment is expected to last more than 12 months * Non-English speaking

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Patient and caregiver engagement, measured by the PHQ, IES-R, Distress Thermometer, & Effective Consumer Scale-17 & Psychosocial well-being, measured by the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ), Impact of Event Scale-Revised (IES-R), & Distress ThermometerUp to 2 months following the end of therapyWill be compared between participants (patients and caregivers) and between those treated at VICC and MMC. Will use continuous scores on the depression, anxiety, and somatic symptom scales for the primary analyses; supplemental analyses will examine the percentage of patients above and below the recommended clinical cut-offs on these scales before and after the interventions. Will develop a regression model with the treatment group as the primary variable of interest.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Referral to subspecialistsUp to 2 months following the end of therapyWill develop a regression model with the treatment group as the primary variable of interest.
Adherence to National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guidelines, as measured by chart review (patients only)Up to 2 months following the end of therapyWill develop a regression model with the treatment group as the primary variable of interest.
Resource utilization, as measured by the Effectiveness in Obtaining Resources Scale and the Cancer Resource SurveyUp to 2 months following the end of therapyWill develop a regression model with the treatment group as the primary variable of interest.
Usefulness of navigation, as measured by the Usefulness of Navigator instrumentUp to 2 months following the end of therapyWill develop a regression model with the treatment group as the primary variable of interest.

Other

MeasureTime frameDescription
Process assessment, as measured by process evaluation questionnaireUp to 2 months following the end of therapyWill be descriptive. Will develop a regression model with the treatment group as the primary variable of interest. Will conduct univariable tests of significance using chi-squared tests.
Participation ratesUp to 2 months following the end of therapyWill be descriptive. Will develop a regression model with the treatment group as the primary variable of interest. Will conduct univariable tests of significance using chi-squared tests.
Completion ratesUp to 2 months following the end of therapyWill be descriptive. Will develop a regression model with the treatment group as the primary variable of interest. Will conduct univariable tests of significance using chi-squared tests.

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026