Breast Cancer Clinical Trial

MEND 2: Making Treatment Decisions Using Genomic Testing

Summary

Clinical guidelines for women with early stage breast cancer integrate genomic tumor profiling tests such as the Oncotype DX Recurrence Score to refine recurrence estimates and systemic therapy selection when combined with existing markers. Guidelines suggest that the 25% with a high Score benefit from chemotherapy and the 50% with a low Score can safely avoid chemotherapy. Many challenges remain to maximize the benefits of testing prior to release of trial results in the next year. Strong clinical communication can impact proximal outcomes of patient comprehension, treatment preferences and satisfaction, involvement in care decisions as well as longer-term outcomes of treatment adherence and QOL. These proximal outcomes can be influenced by patient activation interventions utilizing a question prompt list (QPL). In the context of patients receiving Oncotype DX testing, the QPL could allow them to better understand the rationale for their oncologist's treatment recommendation, what it means for managing their disease, and encourage alignment of treatment preferences and selection with the Recurrence Score. Research is conducted in two phases to test the feasibility and impact of the QPL. In Phase 1, the draft QPL will be revised based on in-depth interviews with patients (N=20) and medical oncologists (N=10). Phase 2 will be a single-arm trial (N=75) to demonstrate feasibility and preliminarily assess the impact of the QPL on key outcomes.

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Full Description

Breast cancer is the most common cancer among US women, with more than 230,000 new diagnoses and 40,000 deaths each year, along with decrements in quality of life. Half of all newly-diagnosed patients are affected with estrogen-receptor positive, early-stage disease. Clinical guidelines for these women integrate genomic tumor profiling tests such as the Oncotype DX® Recurrence Score to refine recurrence estimates and systemic therapy selection when combined with existing markers. Thousands of women receive testing each year. While these women should all receive hormonal therapy, guidelines suggest that the 25% with a high Score benefit from additional chemotherapy and the 50% with a low Score can safely avoid chemotherapy. Appropriate treatment for the 25% of women with intermediate Recurrence Scores remains unclear until clinical trial (TAILORx) results are released in the next year.

Despite continuing dissemination, many challenges remain to maximize the benefits offered by testing and refined treatment selection. TAILORx results will continue to strengthen the evidence for clinical utility and increase testing rates. An effective intervention should be ready to respond to this increasing need. Communication can influence more proximal outcomes, including patient comprehension of their disease and its treatments, treatment preferences and satisfaction, involvement in care decisions as well as longer-term outcomes of treatment adherence and quality of life. This trial will test the feasibility and impact of a patient activation intervention to support effective integration of the Recurrence Score into clinical encounters and treatment decisions. Patient activation interventions utilizing a question prompt list (QPL) can impact proximal outcomes of preferences, comprehension, satisfaction and involvement. In Phase 1, investigators will further refine a draft QPL based on in-depth interviews with patients (N = 20) and medical oncologists (N = 10). In Phase 2, women with newly-diagnosed breast cancer will be recruited to a single-arm trial (N = 75) to demonstrate feasibility and preliminarily assess the impact of the QPL on key outcomes. Aims are to:

Aim 1. Examine intervention feasibility. Feasibility will be examined in 3 areas: 1) patient and oncologist acceptability, 2) participant recruitment and retention, and 3) intervention dosage and fidelity.

Aim 2. Evaluate intervention effects on comprehension and treatment preferences. 2a: Participants will demonstrate significant increases in comprehension about their disease and its treatments from pre- to post-QPL. 2b: Participants will be more likely to report Score-concordant preferences from pre to post-QPL.

Aim 3. Assess potential intervention mechanisms on comprehension, preferences and satisfaction. 3a: Patient comprehension and satisfaction will be higher following encounters with greater shared decision making, greater perceived communication quality, and more frequent discussion of risks/benefits of treatments. 3b: Patient preferences will likely be more Score-concordant following encounters with greater shared decision making, greater perceived communication quality, and more frequent discussion of risks/benefits of treatments.

Variation in outcomes will be explored across Aims 1-3 based on patient and provider sociodemographics, patient-provider concordance (gender, race), and patient's language preference.

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Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Women aged 40-75 who receive Oncotype DX testing are eligible.

Exclusion Criteria:

Cognitive impairment that precludes informed consent and inability to converse in English given the focus on communication in this study. Clinical communication between providers and patients with limited English proficiency is beyond the scope of this work.

Study is for people with:

Breast Cancer

Estimated Enrollment:

80

Study ID:

NCT03183050

Recruitment Status:

Completed

Sponsor:

Georgetown University

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There are 2 Locations for this study

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Medstar Cancer Network
Washington District of Columbia, 20007, United States
H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center
Tampa Florida, 33612, United States

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Study is for people with:

Breast Cancer

Estimated Enrollment:

80

Study ID:

NCT03183050

Recruitment Status:

Completed

Sponsor:


Georgetown University

How clear is this clinincal trial information?

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