Stepped approach to improving sexual function after gynaecological cancer: the SAFFRON feasibility RCT

Women affected by gynaecological cancer are often unaware of the sexual consequences of both the cancer and its treatment. Most do not receive appropriate advice or help to recover sexual function, and the effect on their sexuality may be profound, both physically and emotionally. However, several p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health technology assessment (Winchester, England) England), 2019-02, Vol.23 (6), p.1-92
Hauptverfasser: Gessler, Sue, King, Michael, Lemma, Alessandra, Barber, Julie, Jones, Louise, Dunning, Susan, Madden, Val, Pilling, Stephen, Hunter, Rachael, Fonagy, Peter, Summerville, Karen, MacDonald, Nicola, Olaitan, Adeola, Lanceley, Anne
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Women affected by gynaecological cancer are often unaware of the sexual consequences of both the cancer and its treatment. Most do not receive appropriate advice or help to recover sexual function, and the effect on their sexuality may be profound, both physically and emotionally. However, several potential therapies can be effective in helping recover some sexual engagement and change self-perception around sex. A major initial challenge is informing and involving patients in an appropriate and sensitive manner, and a further issue is delivering therapies in busy gynaelogical oncology clinics. This study was conceived in response to a National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment (HTA) call asking for proposals to improve sexual functioning in women treated for gynaecological cancer while taking into account associated issues of mood. Existing evidence-based therapies for improving sexual function after cancer treatment were adapted and placed within a 'stepped care' model for delivering these in the NHS setting. An assessment and treatment stepping algorithm was developed in parallel, both to assign women to a treatment level at assessment and to follow their progress session by session to advise on changing intervention level. The assessment tool was applied to all participants on the principle that the problem was sexual difficulty, not the cancer of origin. Women aged > 18 years (with partners at their choice) treated for any gynaecological malignancy with surgery and/or chemotherapy and/or radiation at University College London Hospital or Bristol Gynaecological cancer centres, minimally 3 months post end of treatment, of any sexual orientation, with sexual function difficulties identified by three initial screening questions. A feasibility two-arm, parallel-group randomised controlled pilot trial. Two NHS gynaecological cancer centres, one in London and one in Bristol. A three-level stepped care intervention. To assess the feasibility of conducting a full-scale investigation of stepped therapy and indicate the potential benefits to patients and to the NHS generally. Recruitment to study, proportion of women stepping up, number of usable data points of all measures and time points over length of trial, and retention of participants to end of trial. Development of the intervention and accompanying algorithm was completed. The study was stopped before the recruitment stage and, hence, no randomisation, recruitment, numbers
ISSN:1366-5278
2046-4924
DOI:10.3310/hta23060