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An AI-Generated, Personalized Question Prompt List Intervention for Patients With Hematologic Cancers

An AI-Generated, Personalized Question Prompt List Intervention for Patients With Hematologic Cancers

Recruiting
20-99 years
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

The goal of this study is to evaluate the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of an artificial intelligence (AI)-generated personalized question prompt list (a list of suggested questions to ask during outpatient appointments) for patients with hematologic cancers. The intervention will involve tailoring a standardized prompt to patients' individual characteristics and concerns. This prompt will then be used to ask Washington University's (WashU) HIPAA compliant ChatGPT to generate personalized question lists for outpatient appointments. Analyses will assess the impact of personalized QPLs on patients' question-asking behavior; communicative self-efficacy; and self-reported amount and satisfaction with information obtained about their disease and its treatment. Sub-analyses will explore patterns in questions generated by WashU ChatGPT. Patients will also provide feedback pertaining to the perceived helpfulness and ease-of-use of WashU-ChatGPT-generated question lists, as well as their attitudes and intentions regarding use of AI chatbots and whether they would engage in pre-appointment AI-assisted question brainstorming independently in the future.

Eligibility

Eligibility Criteria as determined by Electronic Health Record (EHR) Screening:

  • Documented diagnosis of lymphoma, as defined by ICD-10 codes C81-C88 or multiple myeloma, as defined by ICD codes C90.0-C90.02
  • Has a scheduled follow-up appointment at a participating outpatient oncology clinic within the next month. Participating clinics include:
    • Dr. David Russler-Germain: Outpatient Lymphoma Clinic
    • Dr. Michael Slade: Outpatient Multiple Myeloma Clinic
  • Undergoing chemotherapy intended to cure or manage the disease, as opposed to regimens delivered solely for palliative purposes, at a frequency of once every 1-4 weeks.
    • For eligible patients with lymphoma, this includes, but is not limited to, commonly prescribed treatment combinations such as R-CHOP (Rituximab, Cyclophosphamide, Doxorubicin/Hydroxydaunorubicin, Vincristine, and Prednisone) for Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma, or ABVD (Adriamycin/Doxorubicin, Bleomycin, Vinblastine, and Dacarbazine) for Hodgkin Lymphoma-both regimens that are frequently administered every three weeks
    • For patients with multiple myeloma, eligibility will be limited to patients in the "induction" phase of chemotherapy treatment, which frequently requires patients to come in for outpatient appointments once every four weeks
  • Between age 20-99 at enrollment (Patients aged 18-19 and older than 99 will be excluded so that the study team is able to elicit questions from WashU ChatGPT using a standardized prompt that describes the patient's age only as specifically as a 10-year decade range (i.e., "I am a patient in my 20's, 30's, 40's, etc.).
  • Able to consent to medical care independently (does not have a legally authorized representative or documented diagnosis of cognitive impairment)

Eligibility Criteria as determined by subsequent recruitment phone call:

  • Does not have visual impairments or English literacy limitations that would interfere with ability to engage in an intervention that requires being able to read material on an electronic device and on paper and communicate aloud during appointments with health care providers, based on patient self-report
  • Able to use email (consent form will be distributed electronically through DocuSign and associated emails), based on successful completion of electronic informed consent

Study details
    Lymphoma
    Multiple Myeloma

NCT07226934

Washington University School of Medicine

1 February 2026

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