接受癌症治疗的患者不良事件的电子自我报告:eRAPID研究项目包括两项随机对照试验

G. Velikova, K. Absolom, J. Hewison, P. Holch, L. Warrington, K. Avery, H. Richards, J. Blazeby, B. Dawkins, C. Hulme, R. Carter, L. Glidewell, Ann Henry, K. Franks, G. Hall, S. Davidson, K. Henry, C. Morris, M. Conner, L. McParland, K. Walker, E. Hudson, Julia M. Brown
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This research programme developed and evaluated an electronic system, called eRAPID, for cancer patients to remotely self-report adverse events.\n \n \n \n The objectives were to address the following research questions: is it feasible to collect adverse event data from patients’ homes and in clinics during cancer treatment? Can eRAPID be implemented in different hospitals and treatment settings? Will oncology health-care professionals review eRAPID reports for decision-making? When added to usual care, will the eRAPID intervention (i.e. self-reporting with tailored advice) lead to clinical benefits (e.g. better adverse event control, improved patient safety and experiences)? Will eRAPID be cost-effective?\n \n \n \n Five mixed-methods work packages were conducted, incorporating co-design with patients and health-care professionals: work package 1 – development and implementation of the electronic platform across hospital centres; work package 2 – development of patient-reported adverse event items and advice (systematic and scoping reviews, patient interviews, Delphi exercise); work package 3 – mapping health-care professionals and care pathways; work package 4 – feasibility pilot studies to assess patient and clinician acceptability; and work package 5 – a single-centre randomised controlled trial of systemic treatment with a full health economic assessment.\n \n \n \n The setting was three UK cancer centres (in Leeds, Manchester and Bristol).\n \n \n \n The intervention was developed and evaluated with patients and clinicians. The systemic randomised controlled trial included 508 participants who were starting treatment for breast, colorectal or gynaecological cancer and 55 health-care professionals. The radiotherapy feasibility pilot recruited 167 patients undergoing treatment for pelvic cancers. The surgical feasibility pilot included 40 gastrointestinal cancer patients.\n \n \n \n eRAPID is an online system that allows patients to complete adverse event/symptom reports from home or hospital. The system provides immediate severity-graded advice based on clinical algorithms to guide self-management or hospital contact. Adverse event data are transferred to electronic patient records for review by clinical teams. Patients complete an online symptom report every week and whenever they experience symptoms.\n \n \n \n In systemic treatment, the primary outcome was Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy – General, Physical Well-Being score assessed at 6, 12 and 18 weeks (primary end point). 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No between-arm differences were found for admissions or calls/visits to acute oncology or chemotherapy delivery. Health economic analyses over 18 weeks indicated no statistically significant difference between the cost of the eRAPID information technology system and the cost of usual care (£12.28, 95% confidence interval –£1240.91 to £1167.69; p > 0.05). Mean differences were small, with eRAPID having a 55% probability of being cost-effective at the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence-recommended cost-effectiveness threshold of £20,000 per quality-adjusted life-year gained. Patient self-efficacy was greater in the intervention arm (0.48, 95% confidence interval 0.13 to 0.83; p = 0.0073). Qualitative interviews indicated that many participants found eRAPID useful for support and guidance. Patient adherence to adverse-event symptom reporting was good (median compliance 72.2%). In the radiotherapy pilot, high levels of consent (73.2%) and low attrition rates (10%) were observed. Patient quality-of-life outcomes indicated a potential intervention benefit in chemoradiotherapy arms. In the surgical pilot, 40 out of 91 approached patients (44%) consented. Symptom report completion rates were high. Across the studies, clinician intervention engagement was varied. Both patient and staff feedback on the value of eRAPID was positive.\n \n \n \n The randomised controlled trial methodology led to small numbers of patients simultaneously using the intervention, thus reducing overall clinician exposure to and engagement with eRAPID. Furthermore, staff saw patients across both arms, introducing a contamination bias and potentially reducing the intervention effect. 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引用次数: 3

摘要

癌症的治疗采用多种方式(如手术、放疗和全身治疗),并经常伴有影响治疗效果和生活质量的不良事件。定期报告不良事件可以通过及时发现和管理来改善护理和安全性。信息技术提供了一种可行的监测模式,但还需要进行应用研究。该研究项目开发并评估了一个名为eRAPID的电子系统,用于癌症患者远程自我报告不良事件。目的是解决以下研究问题:在癌症治疗期间从患者家中和诊所收集不良事件数据是否可行?eRAPID可以在不同的医院和治疗环境中实施吗?肿瘤保健专业人员是否会审查eRAPID报告以作决策?当加入常规护理时,eRAPID干预(即自我报告并提供量身定制的建议)是否会带来临床益处(例如更好的不良事件控制,改善患者安全性和体验)?eRAPID是否具有成本效益?开展了五个混合方法工作包,其中包括与患者和保健专业人员共同设计:工作包1——在各医院中心开发和实施电子平台;工作包2 -制定患者报告的不良事件项目和建议(系统和范围审查、患者访谈、德尔菲练习);工作包3——绘制保健专业人员和护理路径图;工作包4 -可行性试点研究,以评估病人和临床医生的接受程度;工作包5——一项具有全面健康经济评估的系统性治疗的单中心随机对照试验。实验的背景是英国的三家癌症中心(分别位于利兹、曼彻斯特和布里斯托尔)。干预措施是由患者和临床医生共同制定和评估的。这项系统随机对照试验包括508名开始接受乳腺癌、结肠直肠癌或妇科癌症治疗的参与者和55名保健专业人员。放射治疗可行性试验招募167例盆腔癌患者。手术可行性试点包括40例胃肠道肿瘤患者。eRAPID是一个在线系统,允许患者在家中或医院完成不良事件/症状报告。该系统根据临床算法提供即时的严重程度分级建议,以指导自我管理或与医院联系。不良事件数据被转移到电子病历中,供临床小组审查。患者每周完成一份在线症状报告,每当他们出现症状时。在全身治疗中,主要终点是癌症治疗的功能评估-一般,身体健康评分在6、12和18周评估(主要终点)。次要结果包括通过比较保健费用和质量调整生命年评估的成本效益。采用《慢性病管理自我效能6项量表》测量患者的自我效能。放疗试点研究了可行性(招募率和损耗率)和结局指标的选择。手术飞行员检查了症状报告的完整性、系统操作、使用eRAPID的障碍和技术性能。eRAPID已成功开发并在各治疗中心推广。该系统随机对照试验发现,在18周时,eRAPID对主要终点无统计学显著影响。第6周有显著影响(校正差最小二乘法均值1.08,95%可信区间0.12 ~ 2.05;P = 0.028)和12周(校正差最小二乘均值1.01,95%可信区间0.05 ~ 1.98;p = 0.0395)。急性肿瘤或化疗的入院或电话/访问没有发现组间差异。18周以上的健康经济分析表明,eRAPID信息技术系统的成本与常规护理的成本(12.28英镑,95%可信区间为1240.91英镑至1167.69英镑;p > 0.05)。平均差异很小,在国家健康与护理卓越研究所推荐的成本效益阈值为每获得质量调整生命年20,000英镑的成本效益阈值下,eRAPID具有成本效益的概率为55%。干预组患者自我效能感更高(0.48,95%可信区间0.13 ~ 0.83;p = 0.0073)。定性访谈表明,许多参与者认为eRAPID对支持和指导很有用。患者对不良事件症状报告的依从性良好(中位依从性为72.2%)。在放疗试点中,观察到高水平的同意率(73.2%)和低流失率(10%)。患者生活质量结果显示放化疗组的潜在干预益处。 在外科试验中,91名接触的患者中有40名(44%)表示同意。症状报告完成率高。在这些研究中,临床医生参与干预的程度各不相同。患者和工作人员对eRAPID价值的反馈都是积极的。随机对照试验方法导致少量患者同时使用干预措施,从而减少了临床医生对eRAPID的总体接触和参与。此外,工作人员看到的病人横跨双臂,引入污染偏差,并可能降低干预效果。卫生经济结果受到缺少数据数量的限制(例如资源使用和EuroQol-5维度)。本研究提供的证据表明,带有内置患者建议的在线症状监测对患者和临床团队来说是可以接受的。发现了患者受益的证据,特别是在治疗的早期阶段和与自我效能有关。这些发现将有助于改进干预措施并指导未来的试验设计。建议在放疗和手术环境中进行明确的试验。在系统治疗过程中,未来的研究可以研究自我报告在线干预措施,以取代治疗环境中传统随访护理的要素。建议在现代靶向治疗(如免疫治疗和小分子口服治疗)和转移性疾病方面进行进一步研究。该系统随机对照试验注册号为ISRCTN88520246。放疗试验注册为ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02747264。该项目由国家卫生研究所(NIHR)应用研究方案资助,并将全文发表在应用研究方案资助上;第10卷第1期请参阅NIHR期刊图书馆网站了解更多项目信息。
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Electronic self-reporting of adverse events for patients undergoing cancer treatment: the eRAPID research programme including two RCTs
Cancer is treated using multiple modalities (e.g. surgery, radiotherapy and systemic therapies) and is frequently associated with adverse events that affect treatment delivery and quality of life. Regular adverse event reporting could improve care and safety through timely detection and management. Information technology provides a feasible monitoring model, but applied research is needed. This research programme developed and evaluated an electronic system, called eRAPID, for cancer patients to remotely self-report adverse events. The objectives were to address the following research questions: is it feasible to collect adverse event data from patients’ homes and in clinics during cancer treatment? Can eRAPID be implemented in different hospitals and treatment settings? Will oncology health-care professionals review eRAPID reports for decision-making? When added to usual care, will the eRAPID intervention (i.e. self-reporting with tailored advice) lead to clinical benefits (e.g. better adverse event control, improved patient safety and experiences)? Will eRAPID be cost-effective? Five mixed-methods work packages were conducted, incorporating co-design with patients and health-care professionals: work package 1 – development and implementation of the electronic platform across hospital centres; work package 2 – development of patient-reported adverse event items and advice (systematic and scoping reviews, patient interviews, Delphi exercise); work package 3 – mapping health-care professionals and care pathways; work package 4 – feasibility pilot studies to assess patient and clinician acceptability; and work package 5 – a single-centre randomised controlled trial of systemic treatment with a full health economic assessment. The setting was three UK cancer centres (in Leeds, Manchester and Bristol). The intervention was developed and evaluated with patients and clinicians. The systemic randomised controlled trial included 508 participants who were starting treatment for breast, colorectal or gynaecological cancer and 55 health-care professionals. The radiotherapy feasibility pilot recruited 167 patients undergoing treatment for pelvic cancers. The surgical feasibility pilot included 40 gastrointestinal cancer patients. eRAPID is an online system that allows patients to complete adverse event/symptom reports from home or hospital. The system provides immediate severity-graded advice based on clinical algorithms to guide self-management or hospital contact. Adverse event data are transferred to electronic patient records for review by clinical teams. Patients complete an online symptom report every week and whenever they experience symptoms. In systemic treatment, the primary outcome was Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy – General, Physical Well-Being score assessed at 6, 12 and 18 weeks (primary end point). Secondary outcomes included cost-effectiveness assessed through the comparison of health-care costs and quality-adjusted life-years. Patient self-efficacy was measured (using the Self-Efficacy for Managing Chronic Diseases 6-item Scale). The radiotherapy pilot studied feasibility (recruitment and attrition rates) and selection of outcome measures. The surgical pilot examined symptom report completeness, system actions, barriers to using eRAPID and technical performance. eRAPID was successfully developed and introduced across the treatments and centres. The systemic randomised controlled trial found no statistically significant effect of eRAPID on the primary end point at 18 weeks. There was a significant effect at 6 weeks (adjusted difference least square means 1.08, 95% confidence interval 0.12 to 2.05; p = 0.028) and 12 weeks (adjusted difference least square means 1.01, 95% confidence interval 0.05 to 1.98; p = 0.0395). No between-arm differences were found for admissions or calls/visits to acute oncology or chemotherapy delivery. Health economic analyses over 18 weeks indicated no statistically significant difference between the cost of the eRAPID information technology system and the cost of usual care (£12.28, 95% confidence interval –£1240.91 to £1167.69; p > 0.05). Mean differences were small, with eRAPID having a 55% probability of being cost-effective at the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence-recommended cost-effectiveness threshold of £20,000 per quality-adjusted life-year gained. Patient self-efficacy was greater in the intervention arm (0.48, 95% confidence interval 0.13 to 0.83; p = 0.0073). Qualitative interviews indicated that many participants found eRAPID useful for support and guidance. Patient adherence to adverse-event symptom reporting was good (median compliance 72.2%). In the radiotherapy pilot, high levels of consent (73.2%) and low attrition rates (10%) were observed. Patient quality-of-life outcomes indicated a potential intervention benefit in chemoradiotherapy arms. In the surgical pilot, 40 out of 91 approached patients (44%) consented. Symptom report completion rates were high. Across the studies, clinician intervention engagement was varied. Both patient and staff feedback on the value of eRAPID was positive. The randomised controlled trial methodology led to small numbers of patients simultaneously using the intervention, thus reducing overall clinician exposure to and engagement with eRAPID. Furthermore, staff saw patients across both arms, introducing a contamination bias and potentially reducing the intervention effect. The health economic results were limited by numbers of missing data (e.g. for use of resources and EuroQol-5 Dimensions). This research provides evidence that online symptom monitoring with inbuilt patient advice is acceptable to patients and clinical teams. Evidence of patient benefit was found, particularly during the early phases of treatment and in relation to self-efficacy. The findings will help improve the intervention and guide future trial designs. Definitive trials in radiotherapy and surgical settings are suggested. Future research during systemic treatments could study self-report online interventions to replace elements of traditional follow-up care in the curative setting. Further research during modern targeted treatments (e.g. immunotherapy and small-molecule oral therapy) and in metastatic disease is recommended. The systemic randomised controlled trial is registered as ISRCTN88520246. The radiotherapy trial is registered as ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02747264. This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Programme Grants for Applied Research programme and will be published in full in Programme Grants for Applied Research; Vol. 10, No. 1. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
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发文量
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审稿时长
53 weeks
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