4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

SIS.NET: A Randomized Controlled Trial Evaluating a Web-Based System for Symptom Management After Treatment of Breast Cancer

期刊

CANCER
卷 121, 期 6, 页码 893-899

出版社

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/cncr.29088

关键词

questionnaires; survivors; randomized control trial; quality of life; breast neoplasms; self-report; adult; female; health status

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资金

  1. Safeway Foundation

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BACKGROUNDAs cancer survivorship increases, health care systems will be challenged to meet patient needs. With the limited availability of clinician time and resources, novel methods of using patient-reported outcomes may improve the quality and efficiency of follow-up care in patients with breast cancer. METHODSThe authors conducted a randomized trial in patients with TNM stage I to III breast cancer comparing standard care with SIS.NET (System for Individualized Survivorship Care, based on patient self-reported data, with review by Nurse practitioners, targeted Education, and Triage), a follow-up protocol including integration of online health questionnaires at 3-month intervals and the evaluation of self-reported symptoms monitored and addressed remotely by a nurse practitioner (NP). The primary endpoint was to quantify the time between symptom reporting and remote evaluation of symptoms. The secondary endpoint was to compare use of health care resources (breast cancer-related visits, total medical appointments, and laboratory and imaging studies) over an 18-month period. RESULTSA total of 102 participants were enrolled; 2 patients were excluded due to cancer recurrence. In the SIS.NET arm, 74% of new or changed self-reported symptoms were reviewed by a NP in <3 days. SIS.NET patients reported more new or changed symptoms compared with standard care patients (7.36 vs 3.2; P=.0045). During the 18-month trial, there were no statistically significant differences noted between the SIS.NET and standard care arms with regard to oncology-related appointments (mean, 4.2 vs 4.1 appointments), number of physician visits (mean, 10.8 vs 9.6 visits), or medical tests (mean, 5.5 vs 5 tests). CONCLUSIONSIntegration of online health questionnaires with remote review by a NP facilitated symptom reporting and may provide a means of convenient symptom assessment, but it did not appear to reduce health care resource use. Cancer 2015;121:893-899. (c) 2014 American Cancer Society. The results of this randomized controlled trial found that a Web-based system to facilitate symptom management among survivors of breast cancer did not lead to lower appointment frequency. However, Web-based tools to track patient symptoms may help to provide more efficient symptom management.

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