4.1 Article

Study protocol for a randomized trial of bridge: Person-centered collaborative care for serious mental illness and cancer

期刊

CONTEMPORARY CLINICAL TRIALS
卷 123, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.cct.2022.106975

关键词

Psycho-oncology; Health equity; Severe mental disorder; Mental illness; Collaborative care

资金

  1. CRICO Harvard Risk Management Foundation
  2. National Cancer Institute [1K08CA230185-01]
  3. Claflin Distinguished Scholar Award, Harvard Medical School

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This is a 24-week randomized trial that aims to study the impact of person-centered collaborative care on cancer patients with serious mental illness. The trial will evaluate the effect of collaborative care on cancer treatment and assess barriers to implementing and disseminating this care through mixed methods.
Background: Individuals with serious mental illness (SMI) experience inequities in cancer care that contribute to increased cancer mortality. Involving mental health at the time of cancer diagnosis may improve cancer care delivery for patients with SMI yet access to care remains challenging. Collaborative care is a promising approach to integrate mental health and cancer care that has not yet been studied in this marginalized population. Methods/Design: We describe a 24-week, two-arm, single-site randomized trial of person-centered collaborative care (Bridge) for patients with SMI (schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or major depression with psychiatric hospitalization) and their caregivers. 120 patients are randomized 1:1 to Bridge or Enhanced Usual Care (EUC) along with their caregivers. Researchers proactively identify individuals with SMI and a new breast, lung, gastrointestinal, or head and neck cancer that can be treated with curative intent. EUC includes informing oncologists about the patient's psychiatric diagnosis, notifying patients about available psychosocial services, and tracking patient and caregiver outcomes. Bridge includes a proactive assessment by psychiatry and social work, a personcentered, team approach including collaboration between mental health and oncology, and increased access to evidence-based psycho-oncology care. The primary outcome is cancer care disruptions evaluated by a blinded panel of oncologists. Secondary outcomes include patient and caregiver-reported outcomes and healthcare utilization. Barriers to Bridge implementation and dissemination are assessed using mixed methods. Discussion: This trial will inform efforts to systematically identify individuals with SMI and cancer and generate the first experimental evidence for the impact of person-centered collaborative care on cancer care for this underserved population.

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