Colorectal cancer is the 2nd and 3rd most common cancer in respectively women and men, of which about 40% is located in the rectum. The gold standard treatment for rectal cancer (RC) is a low anterior resection, combined with chemoradiotherapy. However, this treatment will negatively impact different aspects of bowel function and the patients' quality of life. These bowel symptoms often remain prevalent, even at 12 months after RC treatment. Most assessment tools are however not capable of capturing the full range or therapeutic-related evolution of these bowel symptoms. Consequently, the aim is to develop a validated bowel diary for diagnosing and evaluation of all bowel symptoms. In recent years, organ-preserving strategies such as Watch and Wait have become more widely implemented. Although these patients avoid surgical morbidity, emerging evidence shows that neoadjuvant radiotherapy alone can also cause substantial and persistent bowel dysfunction. Therefore, the study population was expanded to include patients managed with a Watch and Wait strategy in addition to those undergoing TME/PME.
Colorectal cancer is the 2nd and 3rd most common cancer in women and men, respectively and represents approximately 13% of all new cancer diagnoses, with 40% of cases specifically situated in the rectum. The gold standard treatment for rectal cancer (RC) is a low anterior resection, combined with chemoradiotherapy. However, given the improved oncological results, functional outcomes, such as bowel symptoms, become more and more important. Approximately 60-90% of RC patients are affected with a wide range of new onset bowel symptoms (incontinence for flatus or feces (solid, liquid), frequent bowel movements, urgency, clustering of defecation and evacuation problems) immediately after rectal treatment. The combination of these specific bowel symptoms and their impact on quality of life (QoL) has been summarized in an international consensus definition and is referred to as the Low Anterior Resection Syndrome (LARS). Major LARS has an important impact on QoL and has major health economic consequences. This is attributable to its high prevalence after RC treatment, the chronic nature of symptoms and the limited evidence of available therapeutic options. This context leads to repetitive medical consultations, additional technical examinations which are often not very useful and need for prolonged medical treatment (multiple drug regimens), with often limited therapeutic gain. Furthermore, there is a lack of a comprehensive scoring system to identify the different aspects of LARS, leading to inadequate diagnostics and follow-up of symptoms. Based on these considerations, there is a clear need for a comprehensive scoring system for identification of the different aspects of LARS and monitoring of therapeutic treatment. In recent years, organ-preserving strategies such as Watch and Wait have gained importance in the management of rectal cancer. Although these patients avoid surgical morbidity, growing evidence shows that neoadjuvant radiotherapy alone can also induce substantial and persistent bowel dysfunction, likely due to radiation scatter affecting adjacent pelvic structures. As Watch and Wait is increasingly implemented in clinical practice, it is essential that this patient group is included in the development of a comprehensive scoring system to accurately capture the full spectrum and evolution of bowel symptoms across all treatment pathways.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
158
This bowel diary will be available on the smartphone in the form of an application.
UZ Leuven
Leuven, Vlaams-Brabant, Belgium
RECRUITINGSelection of items for the newly developed bowel diary
The selection of items for a comprehensive bowel diary in patients with rectal cancer is based on a literature review, a patient focus group and an international Delphi survey. The patient focus group is recorded using an audio and video recording. This recording is transcribed verbatim by the researcher into a Word document. The transcription will be analyzed using NVIVO 9 software. In this Delphi survey, a multidisciplinary group of experts will score each item of the long list on a 1-9-point Likert scale from 'Not relevant' (1) to 'Essential' (9) for inclusion in the bowel diary. Finally, a patient consultation meeting and a consensus meeting will be held for the participants who completed the Delphi survey.
Time frame: 12 months
Assessment of content validity of the newly developed bowel diary in a post-Delphi patient focus group consisting of 8-12 participants
Content validation of the newly developed bowel diary will be tested during interview in the post-Delphi patient focus group. This focus group is recorded using an audio and video recording. This recording are transcribed verbatim by the researcher into a Word document. The transcription will be analyzed using NVIVO 9 software.
Time frame: 12 months
The usability of the newly developed e-diary, assessed with the System Usability Scale (SUS) in patients after rectal surgery for rectal cancer
The participants will be asked to use a newly developed electronic bowel diary for 7 consecutive days. This bowel diary will be available on the smartphone in the form of an application. After 7 days, the usability of this e-diary will be assessed with the System Usability Scale (SUS). The SUS is a questionnaire consisting of 10 items, utilizing a 5-point Likert scale to measure users' perceived satisfaction with the system. It includes two subscales focusing on usability and learnability. Scores on the SUS range from 0 to 100, with no direct correlation to percentiles (i.e., a score of 60 does not signify a usability level of 60%). Instead, a score of 70 points or higher is commonly employed as an initial threshold indicating acceptable usability. This benchmark is derived from the overall mean of more than 200 studies covering various systems and products.
Time frame: 12 months
The usability of the newly developed e-diary will be evaluated through conversations with patients who have undergone rectal surgery for rectal cancer, after these patients have used the e-diary for seven consecutive days
Participants will be instructed to use a newly developed electronic bowel diary via a smartphone app for seven consecutive days. The research will then conduct conversations with the participants covering aspects such as complexity, the need for additional support, application coherence, user-friendliness, pre-existing knowledge requirements, and suggestions for improvement. Audio and video recordings of these conversations will be transferred to the researcher's computer and subsequently transcribed into a Word document. The transcriptions will be analyzed using NVIVO 9 software.
Time frame: 12 months
Construct validity of the newly developed bowel e-diary: Known groups method
Patients will be divided into two groups based on their LARS score: no/minor LARS and major LARS. Over a 7-day period, patients will be asked to complete the bowel diary, which will then be examined to determine if there is a meaningful difference between the two groups. The Mann-Whitney U-test will be used to assess whether the difference is significant, and the C-index will be calculated to evaluate how well the test distinguishes between the groups. A C-index of 0.65 or higher would indicate that the test is effective at differentiating between the groups.
Time frame: 12 months
Construct validity of the newly developed bowel e-diary: Convergent and divergent validity
The bowel diary will be completed by patients over a 7-day period, while the questionnaires (such as LARS, MSKCC-BFI, COREFO, PAC-SYM, QLQ-C30) will be filled out on day 7. The correlation between the bowel diary and the questionnaires (such as LARS, MSKCC-BFI, COREFO, PAC-SYM, QLQ-C30) will be calculated. The correlation will be performed across the entire set of questionnaires and bowel diary items, while pairwise correlations at the subscale level will analyze the relationship between related factors.
Time frame: 12 months
Test-retest reliability of the newly developed bowel e-diary
To investigate the test-retest reliability of the newly developed bowel e-diary, patients will have to fill out the bowel diary application twice, each time for a continuous period of 7 days, during a period when the disorder and treatment do not change (i.e., after the end of adjuvant treatment and/or after closure of an eventual temporary postoperative ileostomy).
Time frame: 12 months
Responsiveness of the newly developed bowel e-diary in patients after rectal surgery for rectal cancer. The newly validated e-diary is the primary outcome.
To evaluate the responsiveness of the new bowel diary, patients will complete the diary for 14 consecutive days. The first 7 days (day 1-7) will be compared with the following 7 days (day 7-14). Internal responsiveness will be calculated using the Standardized Response Mean (SRM) for the bowel diary. External responsiveness will be assessed by calculating the SRM for both the bowel diary and the LARS score and MSKCC-BFI questionnaires.
Time frame: 12 months
Explorative analysis of bowel symptoms in Watch and Wait
To exploratively analyse the type and severity of bowel symptoms in patients managed with a Watch and Wait strategy, and to compare these symptoms with those reported by patients who underwent TME/PME surgery.
Time frame: 12 months
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