The goal of this randomized controlled pilot study is to assess the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effects of the PACHA program designed for women having an adjuvant endocrine therapy (AET) after hormone-sensitive breast cancer. PACHA (programme en Pharmacie pour l'ACcompagnement des femmes ayant de l'Hormonothérapie Adjuvante) is a community pharmacy-based program aimed at optimizing the experience of AET and its use. The main questions it aims to answer are : * Does the program have an effect on factors expected to influence AET adherence? * Is the program acceptable? * Is the implementation of the program feasible? * What is the feasibility of procedures for carrying out a full-scale study? Participating community pharmacies will be randomized. Pharmacists working in pharmacies assigned to the PACHA group (33 pharmacies) will receive web-based training and manuals to use during their consultations with women having an AET. Recruited women attending these pharmacies will also have access to information and resources about AET (videos, evidence-based booklet). Pharmacists practicing in pharmacies assigned to the control group (33 pharmacies) will provide usual care.
This is a cluster randomized controlled pilot trial using mixed methods (quantitative and qualitative). A cluster consists of a pharmacy, its pharmacists and its patients with adjuvant endocrine therapy (AET) prescription who have agreed to participate. Participating pharmacies will be randomly assigned to two groups. In the first group, pharmacists will provide usual services to women (control group). In the second group, pharmacist and women will have access to the PACHA program in addition to the usual services (intervention group). The PACHA program consists, for the pharmacists, of: * A 85-minutes web-based training to prepare the pharmacists for delivery of the intervention. The program comprises three main sections led by experts: 1) a review of AET pharmacotherapy; 2) information on AET consultation based on the principles of motivational interviewing and video simulations of AET consultations according to program tools and expert feedback of these simulations, and 3) access to materials geared to participating women (web-video capsules about AET, self-management strategies for coping with specific AET side effects and list of resources). The web-based training can be completed in one or more sessions. Pharmacists who complete the program will receive continuing education credits. The PACHA pharmacists will have to complete this program in the weeks after randomization. * Standardized consultation guide based on motivational interviewing to guide AET consultations (by phone or in person). This standardized consultation guide outlines the key steps that the pharmacist must cover during the AET consultation and follows the usual sequence of consultation in pharmacy. This consultation guide is to be used in the first month and 4 months after randomization, or more frequently according to a woman's situation. * Evidence-based web sheets describing (non)pharmacological strategies to cope with side effects (e.g. hot flashes) and other AET-related concerns (e.g. sexuality) and to guide the consultation. For the women, the PACHA program consists of: * Web video capsules to inform women about AET. These video capsules cover how to and why take tamoxifen or an aromatase inhibitor, the possible side effects and strategies to cope with these side effects and, finally, medication intake and daily activities (e.g. diet). This also includes testimonies of women who had breast cancer and an AET. * Evidence-based web sheets describing (non)pharmacological strategies to cope with side effects (e.g. hot flashes) and other AET-related concerns (e.g. sexuality) in a version adapted for the woman. * List of web resources available for women to help cope with side effects and other AET-related concerns. Participation in the study will take place over a period of 6 months. The study will be carried out in approximately 66 pharmacies in the Quebec province (33 will be assigned to the control group and 33 to the intervention group), which include approximately 132 women (66 in the control group and 66 in the intervention group). At the end of the follow-up, pharmacists and women in the control group can, if desired, receive certain tools offered in the intervention group. Pharmacists and participating women will be asked to completed two questionnaires: the first before randomization and the second at the end of the follow-up 6 months later. At the end of the study, 20-30 pharmacists and 20-30 patients will be invited to take part in a semi-directed individual interview (qualitative component) in order to gather their point of view and their experience with the care and services received in relation to AET. The characteristics of pharmacies, pharmacists and patients in the intervention and control groups will be compared. Indicators of acceptability and feasibility will be measured (e.g. recruitment and participation and retention rates). Generalized Estimating Equation (GEE) regression models will be used to compare patterns of changes in scores of factors expected to influence AET experience and adherence in the two groups and between study entry and 6 months later. The main analyzes will be performed on a intention-to-treat basis. For the qualitative component, a thematic analysis will be carried out based on the transcriptions of the semi-structured interviews. The quantitative and qualitative results will be used to optimize the PACHA program, its implementation and to design, if the results support this, a large-scale randomized controlled trial.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
66
Pharmacists in this group will complete the 85-minutes web-based training, schedule and realize at least 2 telephone consultations with participating women in their pharmacy (in the first month and 4 months after randomization) using standardized consultation guides based on the principles of motivational interviewing and, if necessary, the evidence-based web sheets about strategies to cope with side effects and other AET-related concerns. Women in this group will have access to a web site that includes video capsules to inform women about AET, evidence-based web sheets describing strategies to cope with side effects and other AET-related concerns, testimonies of women who had breast cancer and an AET and a list of resources available for women.
Centre de recherche du CHU de Québec
Québec, Quebec, Canada
RECRUITINGMean change from baseline to the end of 6-month follow-up in intention to adhere to adjuvant endocrine therapy
Measured by a questionnaire developed and validated by our team (4 items, score range: 1-7), higher score means higher intention to adhere
Time frame: Baseline and 6-month post-randomisation
Mean change from baseline to the end of 6-month follow-up in adjuvant endocrine therapy knowledge
Measured by a questionnaire developed and validated by our team (17 items, score range: 0-17), higher score means higher level of knowledge
Time frame: Baseline and 6-month post-randomisation
Mean change from baseline to the end of 6-month follow-up in attitude towards adjuvant endocrine therapy
Measured by a questionnaire developed and validated by our team (4 items, score range: 1-7), higher score means more positive attitude
Time frame: Baseline and 6-month post-randomisation
Mean change from baseline to the end of 6-month follow-up in perceived social support
Measured by a questionnaire developed and validated by our team (3 items, score range: 1-7), higher score means higher level of perceived social support
Time frame: Baseline and 6-month post-randomisation
Mean change from baseline to the end of 6-month follow-up in perceived behavioural control
Measured by a questionnaire developed and validated by our team (4 items, score range: 1-7), higher score means higher level of perceived behavioural control
Time frame: Baseline and 6-month post-randomisation
Mean change from baseline to the end of 6-month follow-up in anticipated regret
Measured by a questionnaire developed and validated by our team (6 items, score range: 1-7), higher score means higher level of anticipated regret
Time frame: Baseline and 6-month post-randomisation
Mean change from baseline to the end of 6-month follow-up in coping planning
Measured by a questionnaire developed and validated by our team (6 items, score range: 1-7), higher score means higher level of coping planning
Time frame: Baseline and 6-month post-randomisation
Mean change from baseline to the end of 6-month follow-up in fear of recurrence
Measured by the Fear of cancer recurrence inventory (FCRI) severity scale (9 items, score range: 0-36), higher score means higher level of fear of recurrence
Time frame: Baseline and 6-month post-randomisation
Mean change from baseline to the end of 6-month follow-up in side effects
Measured by the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy - Endocrine Symptoms (FACT-ES) questionnaire (19 items, score range: 0-100), higher score means higher level of side effects
Time frame: Baseline and 6-month post-randomisation
Mean change from baseline to the end of 6-month follow-up in the cognitive representations of medication
Measured by the Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire (BMQ) (5 items for specific necessity, 5 items for specific concerns, score range: 5-25, higher score means higher level of necessity or concerns
Time frame: Baseline and 6-month post-randomisation
Percentage of pharmacists who used PACHA tools in the intervention group
Measured by a questionnaire developed by our team and collected automatically by the study website
Time frame: From Baseline to 6-month post-randomisation
Percentage of women who used PACHA tools
Measured by a questionnaire developed by our team and collected automatically by the study website
Time frame: From Baseline to 6-month post-randomisation
Mean number of interventions dispensed by the pharmacists to the participating women
Measured by a questionnaire developed by our team and collected automatically by the study website
Time frame: From Baseline to 6-month post-randomisation
Percentage of eligible and enrolled pharmacists
Percentage
Time frame: Baseline
Percentage of eligible and enrolled women
Percentage
Time frame: Baseline
Percentage of pharmacies randomized
Time frame: Baseline
Cluster size
Size
Time frame: Baseline
Proportion of days covered by an Adjuvant Endocrine Therapy (AET)
Measured by a questionnaire developed by our team and analysis of AET dispensing collected via pharmacy records
Time frame: From Baseline to 5 years post-randomisation
Proportion of women having an AET
Measured by a questionnaire developed by our team and analysis of AET dispensing collected via pharmacy records
Time frame: From Baseline to 5 years post-randomisation
Mean change from baseline to the end of 6-month follow-up in quality of life
Measured by the Short-Form-12 (SF-12) questionnaire
Time frame: From Baseline to 6-month post-randomisation
Program Acceptability and Feasibility
Measured by semi-structured interviews conducted with pharmacists and participating women on the relevance, acceptability and perceived benefits of each program component (intervention group only).
Time frame: At the end of 6-month follow-up (post-randomisation)
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