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A Self-management Based Survivorship Intervention for Chinese Cancer Survivors

A Self-management Based Survivorship Intervention for Chinese Cancer Survivors

Recruiting
18 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

This study, using a sequential multiple assessment randomized controlled trial (SMART) approach, will evaluate a cancer survivorship care intervention on physical symptom distress, weight management, self-efficacy in managing cancer and health-related quality of life among Chinese patients recently completed curative cancer treatment.

Description

This study, using this SMART approach, will assess the effect of a cancer survivorship care intervention on physical symptom distress, self-efficacy in managing cancer, weight management and health-related quality of life among Chinese patients recently completing curative cancer treatment. First, the investigators will test the effect of a one-off, multidisciplinary team face-to-face assessment (namely, the cancer survivorship clinic) with personalized advice on symptom management, lifestyle modification and anxiety management in reducing the case prevalence of symptom distress, increasing the proportion meeting the weight management criteria, and improving self-efficacy and health-related quality of life among cancer survivors in post-treatment survivorship, in comparison to those receiving skills-based pamphlets for symptom management and lifestyle recommendations. Secondly, this study aims to explore if a step-up targeted personalized intervention is more effective for patients who continue to have symptom distress and/or not to meet the weight management criteria if patients have attended cancer survivorship clinic (i.e. the embedded adaptive intervention) in comparison to those receiving skills-based pamphlets.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Cantonese- or Mandarin-speaking Chinese patients diagnosed curable cancer
  • have completed primary and adjuvant treatment within the past six months

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Patients diagnosed with metastatic cancer

Study details
    Physical Symptom Distress
    Weight Management
    Neoplasms

NCT05534386

The University of Hong Kong

27 January 2024

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