A controlled pilot trial of a nurse-led intervention (Mini-AFTERc) to manage fear of cancer recurrence in patients affected by breast cancer
Abstract Background Fear of cancer recurrence (FCR) is common in people affected by breast cancer. FCR is associated with increased health service and medication use, anxiety, depression and reduced quality of life. Existing interventions for FCR are time and resource intensive, making implementatio...
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doaj-d034dee47fe04950a2ec9fa337a788982020-11-25T03:00:33ZengBMCPilot and Feasibility Studies2055-57842020-05-016111010.1186/s40814-020-00610-4A controlled pilot trial of a nurse-led intervention (Mini-AFTERc) to manage fear of cancer recurrence in patients affected by breast cancerCalum T. McHale0Susanne Cruickshank1Claire Torrens2Jo Armes3Deborah Fenlon4Elspeth Banks5Tom Kelsey6Gerald M. Humphris7Division of Population and Behavioural Sciences, School of Medicine, University of St AndrewsFaculty of Health Sciences and Sport, University of StirlingFaculty of Health Sciences and Sport, University of StirlingSchool of Health Sciences, University of SurreyCollege of Human and Health Sciences, Swansea UniversityNational Cancer Research InstituteSchool of Computer Science, University of St AndrewsDivision of Population and Behavioural Sciences, School of Medicine, University of St AndrewsAbstract Background Fear of cancer recurrence (FCR) is common in people affected by breast cancer. FCR is associated with increased health service and medication use, anxiety, depression and reduced quality of life. Existing interventions for FCR are time and resource intensive, making implementation in a National Health Service (NHS) setting challenging. To effectively manage FCR in current clinical practice, less intensive FCR interventions are required. Mini-AFTERc is a structured 30-min counselling intervention delivered over the telephone and is designed to normalise moderate FCR levels by targeting unhelpful behaviours and misconceptions about cancer recurrence. This multi-centre non-randomised controlled pilot trial will investigate the feasibility of delivering the Mini-AFTERc intervention, its acceptability and usefulness, in relation to specialist breast cancer nurses (SBCNs) and patients. This protocol describes the rationale, methods and analysis plan for this pilot trial of the Mini-AFTERc intervention in everyday practice. Methods This study will run in four breast cancer centres in NHS Scotland, two intervention and two control centres. SBCNs at intervention centres will be trained to deliver the Mini-AFTERc intervention. Female patients who have completed primary breast cancer treatment in the previous 6 months will be screened for moderate FCR (FCR4 score: 10‑14). Participants at intervention centres will receive the Mini-AFTERc intervention within 2 weeks of recruitment. SBCNs will audio record the intervention telephone discussions with participants. Fidelity of intervention implementation will be assessed from audio recordings. All participants will complete three separate follow-up questionnaires assessing changes in FCR, anxiety, depression and quality of life over 3 months. Normalisation process theory (NPT) will form the framework for semi-structured interviews with 20% of patients and all SBCNs. Interviews will explore participants’ experience of the study, acceptability and usefulness of the intervention and factors influencing implementation within clinical practice. The ADePT process will be adopted to systematically problem solve and refine the trial design. Discussion Findings will provide evidence for the potential effectiveness, fidelity, acceptability and practicality of the Mini-AFTERc intervention, and will inform the design and development of a large randomised controlled trial (RCT). Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT0376382 . Registered 4th December 2018, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03763825http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40814-020-00610-4Breast cancerPsychologicalFear of cancer recurrenceFeasibilityBrief intervention |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Calum T. McHale Susanne Cruickshank Claire Torrens Jo Armes Deborah Fenlon Elspeth Banks Tom Kelsey Gerald M. Humphris |
spellingShingle |
Calum T. McHale Susanne Cruickshank Claire Torrens Jo Armes Deborah Fenlon Elspeth Banks Tom Kelsey Gerald M. Humphris A controlled pilot trial of a nurse-led intervention (Mini-AFTERc) to manage fear of cancer recurrence in patients affected by breast cancer Pilot and Feasibility Studies Breast cancer Psychological Fear of cancer recurrence Feasibility Brief intervention |
author_facet |
Calum T. McHale Susanne Cruickshank Claire Torrens Jo Armes Deborah Fenlon Elspeth Banks Tom Kelsey Gerald M. Humphris |
author_sort |
Calum T. McHale |
title |
A controlled pilot trial of a nurse-led intervention (Mini-AFTERc) to manage fear of cancer recurrence in patients affected by breast cancer |
title_short |
A controlled pilot trial of a nurse-led intervention (Mini-AFTERc) to manage fear of cancer recurrence in patients affected by breast cancer |
title_full |
A controlled pilot trial of a nurse-led intervention (Mini-AFTERc) to manage fear of cancer recurrence in patients affected by breast cancer |
title_fullStr |
A controlled pilot trial of a nurse-led intervention (Mini-AFTERc) to manage fear of cancer recurrence in patients affected by breast cancer |
title_full_unstemmed |
A controlled pilot trial of a nurse-led intervention (Mini-AFTERc) to manage fear of cancer recurrence in patients affected by breast cancer |
title_sort |
controlled pilot trial of a nurse-led intervention (mini-afterc) to manage fear of cancer recurrence in patients affected by breast cancer |
publisher |
BMC |
series |
Pilot and Feasibility Studies |
issn |
2055-5784 |
publishDate |
2020-05-01 |
description |
Abstract Background Fear of cancer recurrence (FCR) is common in people affected by breast cancer. FCR is associated with increased health service and medication use, anxiety, depression and reduced quality of life. Existing interventions for FCR are time and resource intensive, making implementation in a National Health Service (NHS) setting challenging. To effectively manage FCR in current clinical practice, less intensive FCR interventions are required. Mini-AFTERc is a structured 30-min counselling intervention delivered over the telephone and is designed to normalise moderate FCR levels by targeting unhelpful behaviours and misconceptions about cancer recurrence. This multi-centre non-randomised controlled pilot trial will investigate the feasibility of delivering the Mini-AFTERc intervention, its acceptability and usefulness, in relation to specialist breast cancer nurses (SBCNs) and patients. This protocol describes the rationale, methods and analysis plan for this pilot trial of the Mini-AFTERc intervention in everyday practice. Methods This study will run in four breast cancer centres in NHS Scotland, two intervention and two control centres. SBCNs at intervention centres will be trained to deliver the Mini-AFTERc intervention. Female patients who have completed primary breast cancer treatment in the previous 6 months will be screened for moderate FCR (FCR4 score: 10‑14). Participants at intervention centres will receive the Mini-AFTERc intervention within 2 weeks of recruitment. SBCNs will audio record the intervention telephone discussions with participants. Fidelity of intervention implementation will be assessed from audio recordings. All participants will complete three separate follow-up questionnaires assessing changes in FCR, anxiety, depression and quality of life over 3 months. Normalisation process theory (NPT) will form the framework for semi-structured interviews with 20% of patients and all SBCNs. Interviews will explore participants’ experience of the study, acceptability and usefulness of the intervention and factors influencing implementation within clinical practice. The ADePT process will be adopted to systematically problem solve and refine the trial design. Discussion Findings will provide evidence for the potential effectiveness, fidelity, acceptability and practicality of the Mini-AFTERc intervention, and will inform the design and development of a large randomised controlled trial (RCT). Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT0376382 . Registered 4th December 2018, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03763825 |
topic |
Breast cancer Psychological Fear of cancer recurrence Feasibility Brief intervention |
url |
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40814-020-00610-4 |
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