4.7 Article

Effects of the WRITE Symptoms Interventions on Symptoms and Quality of Life Among Patients With Recurrent Ovarian Cancers: An NRG Oncology/GOG Study (GOG-0259)

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JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY
卷 40, 期 13, 页码 1464-+

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LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1200/JCO.21.00656

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  1. National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Nursing Research NIH-NINR [R01NR010735-NRG]
  2. NIH-NCI [U10CA180822]
  3. NRG Operations [U10CA180868, UG1CA189867]

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This study compared the efficacy of nurse-guided and self-directed interventions to enhanced usual care in improving symptoms and quality of life for patients with recurrent ovarian cancer. The results showed that both interventions had significantly greater improvements in symptom controllability compared to enhanced usual care, with no significant differences between the nurse-guided and self-directed interventions. Self-directed intervention shows potential as a scalable intervention for future implementation studies.
PURPOSE GOG-259 was a 3-arm randomized controlled trial of two web-based symptom management interventions for patients with recurrent ovarian cancer. Primary aims were to compare the efficacy of the nurse-guided (Nurse-WRITE) and self-directed (SD-WRITE) interventions to Enhanced Usual Care (EUC) in improving symptoms (burden and controllability) and quality of life (QOL). METHODS Patients with recurrent or persistent ovarian, fallopian, or primary peritoneal cancer with 3+ symptoms were eligible for the study. Participants completed baseline (BL) surveys (symptom burden and controllability and QOL) before random assignment. WRITE interventions lasted 8 weeks to develop symptom management plans for three target symptoms. All women received EUC: monthly online symptom assessment with provider reports; online resources; and every 2-week e-mails. Outcomes were evaluated at 8 and 12 weeks after BL. Repeated-measures modeling with linear contrasts evaluated group by time effects on symptom burden, controllability, and QOL, controlling for key covariates. RESULTS Participants (N = 497) reported mean age of 59.3 +/- 9.2 years. At BL, 84% were receiving chemotherapy and reported a mean of 14.2 +/- 4.9 concurrent symptoms, most commonly fatigue, constipation, and peripheral neuropathy. Symptom burden and QOL improved significantly over time (P < .001) for all three groups. A group by time interaction (P < .001) for symptom controllability was noted whereby both WRITE intervention groups had similar improvements from BL to 8 and 12 weeks, whereas EUC did not improve over time. CONCLUSION Both WRITE Intervention groups showed significantly greater improvements in symptom controllability from BL to 8 and BL to 12 weeks compared with EUC. There were no significant differences between Nurse-WRITE and SD-WRITE. SD-WRITE has potential as a scalable intervention for a future implementation study. (C) 2022 by American Society of Clinical Oncology

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