Weekly electronic reporting of symptoms improves care for patients with advanced cancer

People with advanced cancers who reported their symptoms weekly using a digital tool received more timely, and potentially life-saving treatment, compared to those who were evaluated less frequently via regular in-person clinical visits, according to findings from a nationwide study. The PRO-TECT (Patient Reported Outcomes To Enhance Cancer Treatment) trial was led by researchers at the University of North Carolina Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center and conducted at community cancer centers. 

The findings will be presented Nov. 16, 2021, as part of the first American Society of Clinical Oncology Virtual Plenary Series.

Symptoms can arise between regular visits for cancer care and often go undetected and unreported. To help improve clinician awareness and responsiveness to patients' symptoms, the study investigators used a digital system, available via the internet or through an automated phone system, to easily and quickly facilitate collection of patient-reported outcomes (PRO) and convey them in real time to team members.

"Many patients are living longer with and are undergoing treatment for extended periods," said Ethan Basch, MD, MSc, Distinguished Professor and director of the Cancer Outcomes Research Program at UNC Lineberger, and the study's lead author. "We designed a strategy to help care teams better connect with patients when they're at home between visits, with an aim to catch symptoms early before they worsen and cause complications, unnecessary suffering, or avoidable hospitalizations."

In the PRO-TECT trial, 52 community sites were randomized to either have their patients input weekly electronic accounts of symptoms for up to a year or to the usual delivery of care, which meant, for most, waiting until their next regularly scheduled clinic visit. Of the 1,191 patients enrolled in the trial, half electronically reported on seen in , including fatigue, nausea, insomnia, appetite loss, diarrhea, pain, difficulty breathing and constipation. Alerts were sent to nurses if a patient's reported symptoms were severe or worsening.

"In contemporary oncology care, we need to focus on the overall patient experience, including between visits, and not just our experience of the patient when they come to see us in the clinic," noted Basch, director of medical oncology at the UNC School of Medicine and physician-in-chief of the N.C. Cancer Hospital.

Compliance was high as patients completed over 90 percent of weekly surveys during the trial period. The researchers combined self-reported scores for improvement and lack of worsening related to several factors to determine overall benefit for PRO vs standard care. After three months on the trial, of the patients that used PRO, there was a 13.8% increase in the number of patients with benefits in physical function compared to those who only had regular clinical visits; a 16.1% increase in the number of patients with benefits in control if they used PRO vs. regular clinical visits; and a 13.4% increase in the number with benefits in quality of life using PRO compared to regular clinical visits. These were all statistically significant and clinically meaningful improvements over the current standard of care.

"This study provides compelling evidence that a digital intervention without toxicity can improve the experience of patients, raise the patient-centeredness of treatment, and enhance quality of care," Basch said. "That said, it's one thing to demonstrate these benefits but it's another to determine the optimal approach to implement them in a given practice. This is a complex intervention that relies on technology, patient engagement, as well as clinical and administrative staff engagement. A quality improvement approach and mindset are necessary when rolling out such a PRO program."

The researcher's next goal is to figure out what are the best models for implementation and approaches to make the intervention more efficient for practices. The impact of PRO on overall survival is also an outcome built into the trial, with results expected in the next one to two years.

Citation: Weekly electronic reporting of symptoms improves care for patients with advanced cancer (2021, November 15) retrieved 11 July 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2021-11-weekly-electronic-symptoms-patients-advanced.html
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