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A tailored, supportive care intervention using systematic assessment designed for people with inoperable lung cancer: a randomised controlled trial

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 15:21 authored by Penelope Schofield, Anna Ugalde, Karla Gough, John Reece, Meinir Krishnasamy, Mariko Carey, David Ball, Sanchia Aranda
Objective People with inoperable lung cancer experience higher levels of distress, more unmet needs and symptoms than other cancer patients. There is an urgent need to test innovative approaches to improve psychosocial and symptom outcomes in this group. This study tested the hypothesis that a tailored, multidisciplinary supportive care programme based on systematic needs assessment would reduce perceived unmet needs and distress and improve quality of life. Methods A randomised controlled trial design was used. The tailored intervention comprised two sessions at treatment commencement and completion. Sessions included a self-completed needs assessment, active listening, self-care education and communication of unmet psychosocial and symptom needs to the multidisciplinary team for management and referral. Outcomes were assessed with the Needs Assessment for Advanced Lung Cancer Patients, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, Distress Thermometer and European Organization of Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Q-C30 V2.0. Results One hundred and eight patients with a diagnosis of inoperable lung or pleural cancer (including mesothelioma) were recruited from a specialist facility before the trial closed prematurely (original target 200). None of the primary contrasts of interest were significant (all p > 0.10), although change score analysis indicated a relative benefit from the intervention for unmet symptom needs at 8 and 12 weeks post-assessment (effect size = 0.55 and 0.40, respectively). Conclusion Although a novel approach, the hypothesis that the intervention would benefit perceived unmet needs, psychological morbidity, distress and health-related quality of life was not supported overall.

History

Journal

Psycho-Oncology: journal of the psychological, social and behavioral dimensions of cancer

Volume

22

Issue

11

Start page

2445

End page

2453

Total pages

9

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Former Identifier

2006043203

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2013-12-23

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