A pilot randomized controlled trial to evaluate a survivorship care planning intervention for head and neck cancer survivor-caregiver dyads
Purpose Head and neck cancer (HNC) survivors and caregivers face significant challenges after treatment. This study’s objective was to evaluate the effects of a dyadic survivorship care planning (SCP) intervention on survivor and caregiver outcomes. Methods This randomized controlled trial enrolled...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of cancer survivorship 2024-04, Vol.18 (2), p.398-411 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Purpose
Head and neck cancer (HNC) survivors and caregivers face significant challenges after treatment. This study’s objective was to evaluate the effects of a dyadic survivorship care planning (SCP) intervention on survivor and caregiver outcomes.
Methods
This randomized controlled trial enrolled HNC survivors and caregivers within 18 months post-treatment, randomized dyads to SCP (one-session with written SCP and follow-up telephone call) or usual care and administered baseline and 6-month surveys. Multivariable linear regression examined intervention effects on depression and unmet needs in dyads and burden on caregiverss and a set of secondary outcomes. Rating scales and open-ended questions assessed acceptability.
Results
We randomized 89 survivor-caregiver dyads (42 usual care, 47 SCP dyads). Fidelity to SCP was high for most survivorship domains except discussing care barriers (13%). The most commonly discussed referrals included nutrition (83%) and behavioral medicine (38%), but referral uptake was low. The SCP intervention did not improve depression or unmet needs among dyads or burden among caregivers at 6 months relative to usual care (
p
’s > .05). Nurses and dyads rated SCP favorably with > 80% positive ratings for session length and care plan content. Qualitative findings highlighted that SCP helped consolidate complex clinical information and strengthened survivor-caregiver-clinician relationships.
Conclusions
An HNC SCP intervention was acceptable but ineffective in improving dyads’ outcomes.
Implications for Cancer Survivors
Post-treatment SCP in HNC dyads was ineffective in improving outcomes in survivors and caregivers as delivered in this study. More research is needed to understand how to capitalize on the acceptability of the SCP approach and enhance its effectiveness to support dyads. |
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ISSN: | 1932-2259 1932-2267 1932-2267 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11764-022-01227-7 |