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Shared Decision Making on Immunotherapy in Oncology

Shared Decision Making on Immunotherapy in Oncology - Prospective, Randomized, Controlled Trial

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04240717
Acronym
PEF-Immun
Enrollment
126
Registered
2020-01-27
Start date
2020-02-07
Completion date
2022-10-08
Last updated
2022-11-07

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

Conditions

Patient Decision Aid, Treatment As Usual

Keywords

Shared Decision Making, Patient Empowerment, Immunotherapy, Melanoma, Patient Decision Aid

Brief summary

Patients with advanced melanoma are confronted with a serious treatment decision. The current guideline recommends considering the option of immunotherapy with checkpoint inhibitors. The substances approved for this purpose differ greatly in their efficacy and the risk for adverse events. Besides, in about half of the patients with advanced melanoma a BRAF V600 Mutation is found. In these patients, in addition to immunotherapy, treatment with BRAF/MEK inhibitors must be considered. Research on shared decision making suggests that patients achieve greater satisfaction with the decision if they are actively being involved in the decision-making process. To enable them to do so, an interactive, web-based patient decision aid (PtDA) informing about the treatment options for advanced melanoma will be developed and evaluated in a bicentric, prospective randomized controlled clinical trial. The use of PtDA is expected to lead to a higher level of information about the benefits and risks of the various treatment options (primary hypothesis).

Detailed description

Immunotherapies are regarded as a new, promising treatment option for patients with advanced melanoma. However, immunotherapies can cause massive up to life-threatening side effects. The risks and benefits vary considerably between the possible therapy options. Besides, in about half of the patients with advanced melanoma a BRAF V600 Mutation is found. In these patients, in addition to immunotherapy, treatment with BRAF/MEK inhibitors must be considered. This treatment option usually produces a rapid response. In most cases, however, melanomas develop resistance after about 12 months. Therefore, patients with advanced melanoma and their treating physicians are confronted with a very complex and preference-sensitive decision situation. Support in the form of a Patient Decision Aid (PtDA) can be helpful to support this complex decision-making process. In the first project phase, an interactive web-based PtDA on treatment options for advanced melanomas will be developed. In the second phase of the project, the PtDA will be evaluated in a prospective randomized controlled clinical trial. Patients with a diagnosis of advanced melanoma will be recruited at the National Center for Tumor Diseases (NCT) Heidelberg and at the University Cancer Center (UCC) Dresden. Patients of the intervention group will receive access to the interactive PtDA prior to a medical consultation. Patients of the control group will receive the medical consultation only (treatment-as-usual). Group differences between the intervention group and the control group are analysed at T1 (immediately after the medical consultation) and T2 (three months after the medical consultation). The following variables are measured: informedness of the decision (primary outcome), decision satisfaction, and involvement of the patients in the decision process.

Interventions

The Patient Decision Aid is an interactive, web-based tool that provides information on advanced melanoma and its treatment options with a strong focus on immunotherapies (i.e. response to therapy, risk of side effects).

Sponsors

Innovationsfonds des Gemeinsamen Bundesausschusses, Germany
CollaboratorUNKNOWN
University Hospital Heidelberg
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Intervention model description

Participants are assigned to the interventional group (decision aid) or the control group (treatment-as-usual).

Eligibility

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

Inclusion criteria

* diagnosis of metastatic melanoma (C43), stage 3 and 4 * first-line therapy * tumor or metastases are not resectable * sufficient knowledge of the German language to use the PtDA * informed written consent to participate in the study

Exclusion criteria

* limited legal capacity or impairments in this respect * cognitive or physical impairments, which severely complicate the use of the Patient Decision Aid (e.g. impaired vision) * severe psychiatric or mental illness

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Knowledge about different treatment optionsT1 = after intervention (PtDA/TAU); duration of assessment: 10 minutesKnowledge is assessed by a self-developed multiple choice test assessing knowledge about course, benefits, risks, and mechanisms of actions of different treatment options. Higher scores indicate higher knowledge about treatment options.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Decision satisfaction (follow-up)T2 = approx. 3 months after intervention (PtDA/TAU), before and after being informed about potential tumor progress; duration of assessment: 2 minutesDecision satisfaction is assessed with the same scale used at T1 (see Outcome 2 for a detailed description)
Patient involvement in the decision making processduring medical consultation; duration of assessment: approx. 30 minutesPatient involvement in the decision making process is assessed by the Observer OPTION 5 (min. value: 0, max. value: 20, higher scores indicate higher patient involvement in the decision making process)
Decision satisfactionT1 = after intervention (PtDA/TAU); duration of assessment: 2 minutesDecision satisfaction is assessed by the Satisfaction with Decision Scale (SwD; min. value: 6, max. value: 30; higher scores indicate higher satisfaction with decision)
Quality of physician-patient interactionT1 = after the intervention (PtDA/TAU); duration of assessment: 2 minutesQuality of physician-patient interaction is assessed by the Questionnaire on the Quality of Physician-Patient Interaction (QQPPI, min. value: 14, max. value: 70, higher values indicate higher quality of physician-patient interaction)
Knowledge about different treatment options (follow-up)T2: approx. 3 months after intervention (PtDA/TAU), before being informed about potential tumor progress; duration of assessment: 10 minutesKnowledge is assessed with the same multiple choice test used at T1 (see Outcome 1 for a detailed description).
Choice of treatment optionT1 = after the intervention (PtDA/TAU); duration of assessment: 1 minuteChoice of treatment option is assessed by a self-developed item

Countries

Germany

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 23, 2026