Treatment for pediatric acute myeloid leukemia (AML) involves intensive chemotherapy regimens that result in periods of profound neutropenia leaving patients susceptible to severe infectious complications. Infectious complications are the leading cause of treatment related mortality among AML patients, but there are little clinical data to inform whether management of neutropenia post AML chemotherapy should occur in an outpatient or inpatient setting. Further, no studies have been conducted that assess the impact of neutropenia management strategy on the quality of life of pediatric patients with AML and their caregivers.
This is a prospective observational cohort study, where the primary objective of this study is to compare patient and caregiver quality of life and other patient-centered outcomes for inpatient versus outpatient management of neutropenia in children with AML or MDS receiving standard intensive AML frontline chemotherapy. Local study investigators (pediatric oncologists and study coordinators) at each of the fifteen participating pediatric institutions will communicate on a weekly basis with their inpatient leukemia service to identify AML or MDS patients potentially eligible for study enrollment. Once identified, study personnel will review each patient for study eligibility criteria. Three visits with the patient and their caregivers will occur: a screening visit, initial survey visit, and a follow-up visit. Screening Visit: The eligibility criteria for participation will be confirmed prior to approaching for consent. Eligible patients interested in the study will be approached for consent at any time from AML/MDS diagnosis through last day of chemotherapy in the treatment course under study. In some cases, the patient's caregivers may not be present in the hospital to provide consent. In these cases, study personnel will obtain verbal consent from the caregivers and child assent (if appropriate). Visit 1 will occur prior to the last day of chemotherapy administration in the course. This visit will include: * 2 Brief demographic surveys to capture covariates unavailable in the medical record * Baseline health-related quality of life (HRQOL) surveys * A baseline financial toxicity assessment Surveys will be administered via paper or a smart device and will last a total of 15-30 minutes per respondent. In the case that the child is 5 years of age or older, the child self-report and parent proxy-report scales will be separately administered to the child and caregiver, respectively. If the child is under 5 years of age, only the parent-proxy version will be administered. Only the caregiver completes the baseline financial toxicity assessment. We will provide a $25 gift card to each child-parent dyad upon completion of the baseline surveys Visit 2 will occur within the period after absolute neutrophil count recovery and ideally prior to the start of the subsequent course of chemotherapy, but no later than the last day of chemotherapy in that next treatment course. This visit will include: * Follow-up HRQOL surveys * Patient-centered outcome survey developed previously from qualitative interviews of AML patients and their caregivers * A follow-up financial toxicity assessment Surveys will be administered via paper or a smart device and will last a total of 15-30 minutes per respondent. In the case that the child is 5 years of age or older, the child self-report and parent proxy-report scales will be administered to the child and caregiver, respectively. If the child is under 5 years of age, only the parent-proxy version will be administered. The follow-up financial toxicity assessment and the patient-centered outcome survey are completed by the caregiver only. We will provide a $25 gift card to each child-parent dyad upon completion of the follow-up surveys.
Arkansas Children's Hospital
Little Rock, Arkansas, United States
Lucile Packard Children's Hospital
Palo Alto, California, United States
Compare Differences in HRQOL Scores Between Outpatient Versus Inpatient Management
1 Course of Chemotherapy (Approximately 30-40 days). The primary outcome of interest was patient health-related quality of life (HRQOL) measured using the acute PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales.31 These scales use a 7-day time frame. The multidimensional assessment includes items in four domains: physical functioning, emotional functioning, social functioning, and school functioning. Respondents document responses to each question using a 5-point Likert scale anchored by never a problem (0) to almost always a problem (4). PedsQL™ items were reverse scored and linearly transformed to a scale of 0 to 100 such that higher scores reflect better HRQOL.
Time frame: PedsQL assessments were administered at two points - at the start of the study-contributed chemotherapy course prior to the patient becoming neutropenic (baseline) and again within the period between neutropenia resolution (follow-up); follow-up reported.
Responses From Structured Patient-centered Outcome Surveys
Information from semi-structured patient outcome surveys completed by patients and caregivers will be collected to evaluate the relationship between neutropenia management strategy (inpatient versus outpatient) and outcomes reported by patients and caregivers.
Time frame: 1 Course of Chemotherapy (Approximately 30-40 days)
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Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
154
Children's Hospital of Colorado
Aurora, Colorado, United States
Nemours/Alfred I DuPont Hospital for Children
Wilmington, Delaware, United States
Children's Healthcare of Atlanta
Atlanta, Georgia, United States
Ann & Robert H Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute/Boston Children's Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
C.S. Mott Children's Hospital
Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States
Children's Hospital of Michigan
Detroit, Michigan, United States
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
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