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Pilot Study of a an App to Improve Medication Adherence in Breast Cancer Survivors Receiving AIs

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StatusNot yet recruiting
Sponsors
Indiana University

Keywords

Abstract

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the feasibility of an mobile-health strategy to improve patient-reported symptoms, promote life-saving medication adherence, and encourage healthy lifestyle behaviors in early stage breast cancer survivors receiving adjuvant Aromatase inhibitors, while beginning to predict psycho-social and demographic characteristics of those who benefit most from this approach. This will provide preliminary experience and evidence for larger, randomized clinical trials evaluating this methodology, which will have immediate and scalable influence on cancer survivor ship.

Description

This is a single arm, prospective, observational study enrolling up to 50 patients to the intervention in groups of 10 within Indiana University Simon Cancer Center. Subjects must meet eligibility at the time of informed consent. Once 10 eligible subjects are identified and have signed informed consent, each subject will return for their baseline visit and begin the app intervention with their group of 10.

Primary Objective Evaluate the feasibility of a smartphone application, LifeExtend-AI, in patients with early stage breast cancer currently prescribed aromatase inhibitor therapy, determined by patient usage of the application.

Secondary Objectives

1. Determine a preliminary estimate of effect size of the app intervention on medication adherence, by self- report questionnaire MMAS-4.

2. Determine a preliminary estimate of effect size of the app intervention on patient -reported AI arthralgia, as measured by the Basic Pain Inventory (BPI).

3. Determine a preliminary estimate of effect size of the app intervention on patient reported health associated quality of life, measured by the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy- Endocrine symptoms (FACT-ES) questionnaire.

4. Determine a preliminary estimate of the effect size of the app intervention on patient satisfaction with healthcare team communication, measured by the FACIT- Treatment Satisfaction-Patient Satisfaction questionnaire (FACIT-TS-PS).

5. Determine a preliminary estimate of effect size of the app intervention on patient reported health depression and anxiety, as measured by the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS).

6. Determine a preliminary estimate of effect size of the app intervention on patient reported physical activity level, as measured by the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ).

7. Investigate psychosocial and behavioral determinants of application usage and subsequent medication adherence, including perceived AI necessity, fear of cancer recurrence, health self-efficacy, and e-health literacy.

Dates

Last Verified: 10/31/2019
First Submitted: 11/12/2019
Estimated Enrollment Submitted: 11/17/2019
First Posted: 11/19/2019
Last Update Submitted: 11/17/2019
Last Update Posted: 11/19/2019
Actual Study Start Date: 11/30/2019
Estimated Primary Completion Date: 11/30/2020
Estimated Study Completion Date: 11/30/2021

Condition or disease

Breast Cancer
DCIS

Intervention/treatment

Device: Mobile Health Application Intervention

Phase

-

Arm Groups

ArmIntervention/treatment
Experimental: Mobile Health Application Intervention
LifeExtend-AI (LX-AI) will be piloted by adding Aromatase Inhibitor (AI)- specific features to LifeExtend, an already existing healthy lifestyle behavior application produced by LifeOmic. This application includes features for tracking activity, diet, sleep, and body weight, as well as creating "to-do" lists and participating in closed social networking for support and encouragement. LifeExtend-AI will add features to track AI adherence and patient-reported joint pain, with alerts sent to both the participant and the healthcare team in response to these parameters. In addition, the app contains educational videos and articles, to which articles addressing management of AI- related toxicities (including exercise) will be added.
Device: Mobile Health Application Intervention
LifeExtend-AI (LX-AI) will be piloted by adding AI- specific features to LifeExtend, an already existing healthy lifestyle behavior application produced by LifeOmic. This application includes features for tracking activity, diet, sleep, and body weight, as well as creating "to-do" lists and participating in closed social networking for support and encouragement. LifeExtend-AI will add features to track AI adherence and patient-reported joint pain, with alerts sent to both the participant and the healthcare team in response to these parameters. In addition, the app contains educational videos and articles, to which articles addressing management of AI- related toxicities (including exercise) will be added.

Eligibility Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study 18 Years To 18 Years
Sexes Eligible for StudyAll
Accepts Healthy VolunteersYes
Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

1. ≥ 18 years old at the time of informed consent

2. Regular access to a smartphone capable of downloading the application

1. iOS 11 or later (iPhone5, iPhone SE or newer)

2. Android 6 or later (Android 9 is current version)

3. History of DCIS, stage I, II, or III invasive breast cancer

4. Currently prescribed an aromatase inhibitor (letrozole, anastrozole, exemestane) or planned to be initiated on one by the time of signing informed consent. Patient already on an AI must have been prescribed this medication for a total of 36 months or less.

1. Ovarian suppression with AI is allowed in premenopausal patients.

2. Prior SERM and now switching to an AI for the first time is allowed.

3. Concurrent trastuzumab, pertuzumab, or TDM1 is allowed.

4. Concurrent neratinib or other oral cancer directed medication is not allowed.

5. ECOG performance status of 0-2

Exclusion Criteria:

1. Metastatic breast cancer or other active malignancy

1. Locally recurrent breast cancer is allowed if treated with surgical excision and AI is prescribed with curative intent.

2. History of prior treated malignancies, other than breast cancer, that are now stable, are in remission, and do not require active therapy, are acceptable

2. Unable to read the English language or otherwise participate in the study procedures in the opinion of the treating investigator.

Outcome

Primary Outcome Measures

1. Participants who use the LifeExtend-AI application 5 or more days per week [12 weeks]

Feasibility will be measured by participants who use the application 5 or more days per week

Secondary Outcome Measures

1. Mean medication adherence using the Adapted Morisky Medication Adherence Scale (MMAS-4) [Baseline and post intervention (an average of 12 weeks)]

A self report 5 question scale where a total score of 0 indicates high adherence; a score of 1 or 2 indicates intermediate adherence; and a score of 3 or 4 indicates low adherence

2. Mean pain score of self -reported aromatase inhibitor arthralgia using the Basic Pain Inventory (BPI) [Baseline and post intervention (an average of 12 weeks)]

Mean score of the 9 item scale.

3. Mean quality of life score, measured by the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy- Endocrine symptoms (FACT-ES) [Baseline and post intervention (an average of 12 weeks)]

Likert-scaled questionnaire, with response scores ranging from 0 to 4.

4. Mean satisfaction with healthcare team communication, measured by the FACIT- Treatment Satisfaction-Patient Satisfaction questionnaire (FACIT-TS-PS) [Baseline and post intervention (an average of 12 weeks)]

Likert-scaled questionnaire, with response scores ranging from 0 to 3.

5. Mean quality of life, as measured by the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) [Baseline and post intervention (an average of 12 weeks)]

Each item on the questionnaire is scored from 0-3 and this means that a person can score between 0 and 21 for either anxiety or depression. The HADS uses a scale and therefore the data returned from the HADS is ordinal.

6. Mean quality of life, as measured by the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ) [Baseline and post intervention (an average of 12 weeks)]

MET-min per week: MET level x minutes of activity x events per week. To calculate MET minutes a week multiply the MET value given by the minutes the activity was carried out and again by the number of days that that activity was undertaken.

7. Mean quality of life, as measured by the eHEALTH literacy scale (ehEALS) [Baseline and post intervention (an average of 12 weeks)]

he eHEALS contains 8 items, measured with a 5-point Likert scale with response options ranging from "strongly disagree" to "strongly agree." Total scores of the eHEALS are summed to range from 8 to 40, with higher scores representing higher self-perceived eHealth literacy.

8. Mean quality of life, as measured by the Patient Activation Measure (PAM) [Baseline and post intervention (an average of 12 weeks)]

A 13-item survey that assesses a person's underlying knowledge, skills and confidence integral to managing his or herown health and healthcare on a 100 point scale.

9. Mean quality of life, as measured by the assessment of cancer worry in aromatase inhibitor users [Baseline and post intervention (an average of 12 weeks)]

Mean score of 3 item scale with responses on a 1-10 scale where 0 indicates "not at all" and 10 indicates "a great deal"

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