Skip to content

Continuous Activity Monitoring During Fractionated Radiotherapy in Patients With Head and Neck, Lung, or Gastrointestinal Cancer

Continuous Activity Monitoring During Fractionated Radiotherapy: A Pilot Study

Status
Completed
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02649569
Enrollment
41
Registered
2016-01-07
Start date
2015-06-30
Completion date
2017-07-31
Last updated
2018-05-25

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

Conditions

Digestive System Carcinoma, Head and Neck Carcinoma, Lung Carcinoma

Brief summary

This pilot research trial studies continuous activity monitoring during fractionated radiotherapy in patients with head and neck, lung, or gastrointestinal cancer. This study explores the use of fitness trackers to study the activity levels of patients before, during, and after radiation therapy and the use of weekly assessments to measure the patients' quality of life during radiation therapy. This may allow doctors to see if there is any relationship between activity levels, quality of life, treatment interruptions, hospitalizations, and clinical outcomes.

Detailed description

PRIMARY OBJECTIVES: I. To demonstrate the feasibility of continuous, accelerometer-based evaluation of patient activity levels before, during, and after treatment with fractionated external beam radiotherapy. SECONDARY OBJECTIVES: I. To demonstrate the feasibility of performing weekly quality of life assessments during fractionated external beam radiotherapy. II. To explore how accelerometer-based metrics change throughout patients' treatment courses and if these changes are associated with quality of life assessments, treatment interruptions, hospitalizations, and clinical outcomes. OUTLINE: Patients wear an activity monitor throughout and up 4 weeks after completion of radiation therapy. Patients who are willing may continue to wear the monitor through routine follow up appointments. Patients also complete questionnaires at evaluations, which take place prior to radiotherapy initiation, weekly during radiotherapy, and then 2 and 4 weeks after the completion of radiotherapy.

Interventions

Wear activity monitor

OTHERQuality-of-Life Assessment

Complete the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire-Core 30

Sponsors

National Cancer Institute (NCI)
CollaboratorNIH
Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Observational model
COHORT
Time perspective
PROSPECTIVE

Eligibility

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

Inclusion criteria

* Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status 0-2 * Able to ambulate independently (without the assistance of a cane or walker) * Diagnosis of invasive malignancy of the head and neck region, lung, or gastrointestinal tract * Planned treatment with fractionated (\>= 15 treatments) external beam radiotherapy with concurrent chemotherapy with curative intent * Women of childbearing potential must: * Have a negative serum or urine pregnancy test within 72 hours prior to the start of study therapy * Agree to utilize an adequate method of contraception throughout treatment and for at least 4 weeks after study therapy is completed * Be advised of the importance of avoiding pregnancy during trial participation and the potential risks of an unintentional pregnancy * All patients must sign study specific informed consent prior to study entry

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Number of patients who complete most (>= 80%) of the protocol-specified assessmentsUp to 4 weeks post-chemoradiation therapyThis pilot study will yield preliminary data on the feasibility of activity monitoring during radiotherapy as well as possible associations between activity level and various clinical and treatment-related variables. Data from the study will be summarized using standard descriptive statistics; means and standard deviations will be used for normally-distributed continuous variables, and frequencies and percentages will be used for categorical variables. Exploratory analyses for associations between activity levels and clinical and treatment-related variables will be performed using chi-square o
Number of patients who successfully use the activity monitor (i.e. wearing the activity monitor throughout the treatment course)Up to 4 weeks post-chemoradiation therapyThis pilot study will yield preliminary data on the feasibility of activity monitoring during radiotherapy as well as possible associations between activity level and various clinical and treatment-related variables. Data from the study will be summarized using standard descriptive statistics; means and standard deviations will be used for normally-distributed continuous variables, and frequencies and percentages will be used for categorical variables. Exploratory analyses for associations between activity levels and clinical and treatment-related variables will be performed using chi-square o

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 15, 2026