FOCUS is a dyadic, psychoeducational intervention developed in the USA, shown to improve the wellbeing and quality of life (QoL) of patients with advanced cancer and their primary family carers. The intervention consists of five core components underpinning the FOCUS acronym: (F) supporting Family involvement, (O) supporting Outlook and meaning, (C) increasing Coping effectiveness, (U) reducing Uncertainty, and (S) Symptom management. Originally a nurse-delivered in-person intervention, FOCUS has been translated into a self-administered web-based intervention as part of an European study. The overall aim of this project is to determine the effectiveness and sustainability of a digital health intervention (FOCUSau) aimed at improving the wellbeing and self-efficacy of patients with advanced cancer and their primary support person/carer. A primary support person/carer is an unpaid individual identified by the person with advanced cancer (not necessarily a partner or family member) who is providing them with physical, social or emotional support. Hereafter referred to as a "carer". The term "dyad" refers to the patient and primary support person/carer. The project objectives are: 1. adapt FOCUS to the Australian context and develop FOCUSau; 2. examine the effectiveness of FOCUSau in improving the wellbeing (primary outcomes: QoL and self-efficacy) of patients with advanced cancer and their primary family carer; 3. compare the type and costs of health service use by participants in the intervention and control group; and 4. assess the acceptability, feasibility and scalability of FOCUSau in order to inform sustainable implementation of the intervention within the Australian health care system. A pragmatic phase III hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial with an integrated research design that includes digital health evaluation will be used in patients with advanced cancer and their primary support person/carer. Data will be collected three times from patient-carer dyads: 1. at baseline (T0) after which the dyad will immediately be randomised to one of the study arms, 2. first follow-up at 12 weeks after baseline (T1) and, 3. second follow-up at 24 weeks after baseline (T2).
STUDY SETTING: The patient-carer dyads will be recruited via two methods: (1) referral from hospitals or (2) self-referral. For method one, approximately six hospitals and/or cancer centres (metropolitan and regional) across Australia will be selected. For the self-referral recruitment method, patients who have been made aware of the project (but have not been officially screened by a clinician) may self-refer via a webform on the project website. These patients will be made aware via consumer/carer/cancer advocacy groups, or social media advertisement. SAMPLE SIZE: A pre-determined strict fixed sequence (FS) procedure defines prospectively hierarchical ordering of the primary endpoints; emotional wellbeing (1) and self-efficacy (2). Testing of null hypotheses proceeds according to their hierarchical order; that is, hypothesis 1 (H(1)0) is tested first at a significance level of 5%, and if H(1)0 is rejected then hypothesis 2 (H(2)0) is tested at the same significance level, otherwise H(2)0 is not tested at all. The strict FS approach has the highest power for testing the first hypothesis (outcome: emotional wellbeing) compared to the other methods, as it does not save any portion of alpha for testing later hypothesis. The reference mean value from The European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) for all cancer patients, stage III-IV is 71.5 (SD: 23.8). To maintain rigorous control over Type I errors due to multiple comparisons, the alpha level is set at 0.025 instead of the more common 0.05. This adjustment accounts for the multiple comparisons required in the study, including comparisons between a control group and two participant groups (patients and carers). Statistical power is set at 0.80. The expected difference between the control group and the intervention arm in the primary outcomes is 0.375 SD at T1 (12 weeks). With these parameters n=173 dyads are needed in each arm (i.e. 346 dyads in total). Anticipating a maximum 80% retention rate at T1 (USA FOCUS retention was 86%) approximately 433 dyads will need to be recruited. An enrolment rate of 55% of those eligible was achieved in prior digital health FOCUS study from 2014, however it is anticipated this will be higher for FOCUSau (estimating 70%) given the internet is much more widely available now and the digital recruitment approach; meaning that approximately 618 dyads who meet eligibility criteria will need to be identified. Evidence also suggests that recruitment rates can increase when a digital health intervention is offered. DATA ANALYSIS: The effectiveness of FOCUSau will be compared with the standard care (control group) for each participant population (patients/carers) using significance level of alpha=0.025. The hypotheses will be tested using a mixed model (per participant population) with the T1 measurement values for emotional wellbeing and self-efficacy as primary outcomes. These mixed models will be implemented using International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS) for Windows Version 27.0 and R with recruitment centre treated as a random effect and randomisation group as predictor variables. As per the fixed sequence (FS) procedure, the null hypotheses of the second primary endpoint (self-efficacy) will only be tested if a significant result is found for the first primary endpoint (emotional wellbeing). Additionally, other factors identified in the literature will be incorporated as potentially predictive by including them as covariates in the mixed models. Analyses on both 'intention-to-treat' and per-protocol principles will be performed. To interpret the magnitude of the effects for the different outcomes, effect sizes will be estimated (Cohen's d). The data analysis will encompass all primary and secondary outcomes. Primary endpoints, including emotional wellbeing and self-efficacy measured at T1, will be analysed first. Following that, secondary endpoints, comprising outcomes measured at T1 that are not primary endpoints, as well as all outcomes measured at T2 (occurring 24 weeks from T0), will be assessed. This approach allows for a comprehensive evaluation, including the examination of longer-term effects. The robustness and validity of the results will be explored using sensitivity analyses by varying the parameter inputs (including sensitivity to the use of values for missing observations). The analysis will be conducted for the within trial period; the potential to extrapolate results over the longer-term will be assessed based on the proportion of patients alive at the end of follow-up. The cost-effectiveness analysis will be reported as the mean costs of care per dyad in each arm of the study. Costs applied to health care service use will be as per Australian standard fees (e.g., via the Medicare Benefits Schedule). If a difference in outcomes is observed, as hypothesised, the incremental cost effectiveness of FOCUSau compared with control will be estimated in terms of the: (1) cost per additional patient with a meaningful improvement in emotional wellbeing (as assessed using the EORTC QLQ-C30 emotional wellbeing scale); and separately, (2) cost per additional carer with a meaningful change in self-efficacy (as assessed using the The Lewis´ Cancer self-efficacy scale). The base case analysis of cost-effectiveness will be conducted from a health care system perspective. Subsequent sensitivity analyses will modify the assessment of costs to adopt a societal perspective to capture the impact of informal care costs, as well as testing the robustness of the analysis results to variations in other parameter inputs. Missing data for costs and outcomes will be described and summarised. Where missing data can be regarded as missing at random, likelihood (interpolation) methods will be used for analysis of those data as appropriate.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
433
FOCUSau is a self-administered web-based intervention and completed autonomously via the internet by the dyad. Delivery encompasses the completion of four prescribed consecutive FOCUSau sessions (with three weeks between each session) over a period of 12 weeks. The sessions are completed simultaneously by the patient and family carer, together at a computer. The intervention sessions can be completed at any time within the 12-week timeframe. Participants receive tailored individual and dyadic messages according to the information provided at study enrollment and their responses to questions within the sessions. Dyads are also provided with an online personal workbook containing the results of interactive exercises completed during the internet sessions. Any information sheets that the dyad indicated as 'of interest to them' during the internet sessions are included as a hyperlink in their personal workbook which also contains evidence-based local advanced cancer related resources.
Calvary Healthcare Kogarah
Kogarah, New South Wales, Australia
Mater Health Service
Kangaroo Point, Queensland, Australia
Northern Adelaide Palliative Service
Modbury, South Australia, Australia
Barwoon Health Mckellar Centre
Geelong, Victoria, Australia
St Vincents Hospital
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Change in emotional wellbeing
For patients and for carers: The European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Core Quality of Life Questionnaire (EORTC QLQ-C30) 10 emotional function items
Time frame: T0 (baseline), T1 (12 weeks) and T2 (24 weeks)
Change in self-efficacy
For patients and for carers: The Lewis´ Cancer self-efficacy scale
Time frame: T0 (baseline), T1 (12 weeks) and T2 (24 weeks)
Change in patient quality of life
For patients: The European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire Core 15 Palliative Care (EORTC QLQ-C15-PAL)
Time frame: T0 (baseline), T1 (12 weeks) and T2 (24 weeks)
Change in carer quality of life
For carers: The Caregiver Quality of Life Index-Cancer (CQOLC)
Time frame: T0 (baseline), T1 (12 weeks) and T2 (24 weeks)
Change in patient social wellbeing
For patients: social wellbeing scale from Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy - General (FACT-G)
Time frame: T0 (baseline), T1 (12 weeks) and T2 (24 weeks)
Change in patient social functioning
Two social functioning items from The European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) QLQ-C30
Time frame: T0 (baseline), T1 (12 weeks) and T2 (24 weeks)
Change in patient overall health
Two items about overall health from The European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) QLQ-C30
Time frame: T0 (baseline), T1 (12 weeks) and T2 (24 weeks)
Change in appraisal of illness
For patients and for carers: Benefits of Illness Scale
Time frame: T0 (baseline), T1 (12 weeks) and T2 (24 weeks)
Change in coping
For patients and for carers: A shortened version of Brief Cope
Time frame: T0 (baseline), T1 (12 weeks) and T2 (24 weeks)
Change in ways of giving support
For patients and for caregivers: The five items 'Active engagement scale' from the ´Ways of giving support questionnaire´
Time frame: T0 (baseline) T1 (12 weeks) T2 (24 weeks)
Change in dyadic coping
For patients and for caregivers: Three scales from the 'Dyadic Coping Inventory': 'Stress communication by oneself', 'Stress communication by partner' and 'Evaluation of dyadic coping'
Time frame: T0 (baseline) T1 (12 weeks) T2 (24 weeks)
Patient level of functioning
Modified version of Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) Performance Status Assessment
Time frame: T0 (baseline), T1 (12 weeks) and T2 (24 weeks)
Change in utilisation of healthcare and associated services
For patients and for caregivers: Client Service Receipt Inventory (CSRI)
Time frame: T0 (baseline), T1 (12 weeks) and T2 (24 weeks)
Change in quality-adjusted life years
For patients and for caregivers: EuroQoL EQ-5D-5L
Time frame: T0 (baseline), T1 (12 weeks) and T2 (24 weeks)
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