Optimization of a digital health intervention to enhance well-being among adolescent and young adult cancer survivors: Design and methods of the EMPOWER full factorial trial.

IF 2 3区 医学 Q3 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL Contemporary clinical trials Pub Date : 2024-12-20 DOI:10.1016/j.cct.2024.107783
John M Salsman, Karly M Murphy, Elizabeth L Addington, Janet A Tooze, Laurie E McLouth, Dershung Yang, Stacy Sanford, Lynne Wagner, Stephanie C Bunch, Abby R Rosenberg, Carmina G Valle, Brad Zebrack, Dianna Howard, Michael Roth, Judith T Moskowitz
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Abstract

Adolescent and young adult cancer survivors (AYAs) experience clinically significant distress and have limited access to supportive care services. Interventions to enhance psychological well-being have improved positive affect and reduced depression in clinical and healthy populations and have not been routinely tested in AYA survivors. We are optimizing a web-based positive skills intervention for AYA cancer survivors called Enhancing Management of Psychological Outcomes With Emotion Regulation (EMPOWER) by: (1) determining which intervention components have the strongest effects on well-being and (2) identifying demographic and individual difference variables that mediate and moderate EMPOWER's efficacy. EMPOWER is a five-session online intervention that teaches behavioral and cognitive skills for increasing psychological well-being. Guided by the Multiphase Optimization Strategy (MOST), we assign two levels (yes, no) to each of five intervention components (positive events, capitalizing, & gratitude; mindfulness; positive reappraisal; personal strengths & goal-setting; acts of kindness), allowing us to evaluate the effects of individual and combined intervention components on positive affect in a full factorial design. Post-treatment AYA cancer survivors (N = 352) are recruited from participating NCI-designated comprehensive cancer centers and randomized to one of 32 experimental conditions. Our primary outcome is positive affect; potential mediating and moderating variables include coping self-efficacy and emotional support, respectively. Upon trial completion, we will have an optimized, digital health intervention to enhance psychological well-being among AYA cancer survivors. EMPOWER will be scalable and primed for a large, multi-site trial among AYAs who would otherwise not have access to supportive care interventions to manage distress and enhance well-being.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
4.50%
发文量
281
审稿时长
44 days
期刊介绍: Contemporary Clinical Trials is an international peer reviewed journal that publishes manuscripts pertaining to all aspects of clinical trials, including, but not limited to, design, conduct, analysis, regulation and ethics. Manuscripts submitted should appeal to a readership drawn from disciplines including medicine, biostatistics, epidemiology, computer science, management science, behavioural science, pharmaceutical science, and bioethics. Full-length papers and short communications not exceeding 1,500 words, as well as systemic reviews of clinical trials and methodologies will be published. Perspectives/commentaries on current issues and the impact of clinical trials on the practice of medicine and health policy are also welcome.
期刊最新文献
A one-day acceptance and commitment therapy workshop for the prevention of chronic post-surgical pain and long-term opioid use following spine surgery: Protocol for a pilot feasibility randomized controlled trial. The "Mammograms Available Due to Resources and Education" (MADRE) Study: Rationale and Design. Optimization of a digital health intervention to enhance well-being among adolescent and young adult cancer survivors: Design and methods of the EMPOWER full factorial trial. Protocol of an adaptive mobile health intervention for the management of gestational weight gain: The LEAP cluster randomized controlled trial. Development of the Positive Outcomes through Supported Transition (POST) opioid preventive intervention for youth in the legal system: Study protocol for a sequential multiple assignment randomized trial.
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