Overview
To develop an educational patient decision aid for advanced cancer patients to prepare them to have conversations with their clinicians about treatment options (Treatments in Advanced cancer - Decision Aid, TA-DA).
Description
Primary Objectives:
The study objective is to develop an educational patient DA (Treatments in Advanced cancer - Decision Aid, TA-DA) to assist patients, their caregivers, and clinicians to make an informed decision about third-line or beyond palliative systemic therapy for advanced cancer. To fulfill the study's objectives, we will complete 3 study parts:
Using qualitative methods, explore the decision-making needs of patients with advanced cancer, their caregivers, and clinicians, about third-line or beyond palliative systemic therapy; identify initial preferences and recommendations to inform the design of the educational patient DA in Part II.
Following a user-centered design approach, develop and measure the acceptability of an educational patient DA to promote shared decision making among patients with advanced cancer, their caregivers, and clinicians, about third-line or beyond palliative systemic therapy.
Conduct a pilot RCT to estimate the effect of the educational patient DA (TA-DA) on patient's knowledge of their treatment options.
Secondary Objectives:
Examine the impact of the educational patient DA (TA-DA) on patients' illness understanding (Prigerson's items), preparation for decision making (PrepDM Scale), decisional conflict (Decisional Conflict Scale [DCS]), quality of the shared decision-making process (SDM Process Scale), decisional regret (decisional regret scale), therapeutic alliance (The Human Connection Scale [THC]), anxiety (Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7 [GAD-7]), final treatment choice, and end-of-life care outcomes (e.g., systemic therapy use in last month of life).
Examine the impact of the educational patient DA (TA-DA) on caregivers' knowledge of the patient's treatment options, illness understanding (Prigerson's items), preparation for decision making (PrepDM Scale), decisional conflict (DCS), quality of the shared decision- making process (SDM Process Scale), therapeutic alliance (THC Scale), and anxiety (GAD-7).
Examine the acceptability (Ottawa Acceptability Scale) of the educational patient DA (TA-DA) among patients, caregivers, and oncologists in the educational patient DA group. Examine the acceptability (modified Acceptability of Intervention Measure [AIM]), appropriateness (Intervention Appropriateness Measure [IAM]), and feasibility (Feasibility of Intervention Measure [FIM]) of the educational patient DA (TA-DA) among clinicians in the educational patient DA group.
Exploratory Objective:
2.3.1. (Part III) Examine the impact of the educational patient DA (TA-DA) on the concordance between patient-caregiver dyads for knowledge of the patient's treatment options, illness understanding (Prigerson's items), preparation for decision making (PrepDM Scale), decisional conflict (DCS), quality of the shared decision-making process (SDM Process Scale), therapeutic alliance (THC Scale), and anxiety (GAD-7).
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Clinicians (Part I/II/III):
MD Anderson medical oncologists and APPs who provide care to patients with advanced cancer
- Patients (Part I/II/III):
Age 18 or over
- Diagnosis of advanced cancer (i.e., metastatic, relapsed, and/or incurable disease as defined by the treating oncologist) who has received at least 2 lines of palliative systemic therapy*
- Patient-rated ECOG performance status of 1-3 for Part I/II and 2-3 for Part III
- Able to make treatment decisions based on the clinical judgement of the oncology team
- English speaking
- patient has started, is receiving, and/or has completed second-line palliative systemic therapy or beyond
- Caregivers (Part I/II/III):
- Age 18 or older
- Currently a primary caregiver to a patient who satisfies the patient eligibility criteria listed above
- For the study purposes, a primary caregiver is defined as:
- someone who provides physical, emotional, decisional and/or logistical assistance to the patient regularly (e.g. daily, weekly);
- can be a family member, friend, or other individual in a close relationship with the patient;
- must be identified by the patient and self-identify as the primary person providing caregiving support to the patient
- Able to provide informed consent and participate in the study
- English speaking
Exclusion Criteria:
Any patient who meets any of the following criteria will be excluded from participation in this study:
- (Part I/II/III): Diagnosis of cognitive impairment or dementia requiring a surrogate decision maker as determined by the clinical team
- (Part III only): Participants in Part I and II