A randomised clinical trial of 766 patients showed that a simple intervention - a web-based tool that enables patients to report their symptoms in real time, triggering alerts to clinicians - can have major benefits, including longer survival.
Patients with metastatic cancer who used the tool to regularly report symptoms while receiving chemotherapy lived a median of 5 months longer than those who did not use the tool.
These findings were presented in ASCO’s Plenary Session, which features four abstracts deemed to have the greatest potential to impact patient care, out of the more than 5,000 abstracts featured as part of the 2017 American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) Annual Meeting.
“Patients receiving chemotherapy often have severe symptoms, but doctors and nurses are unaware of these symptoms up to half of the time,” said lead study author Ethan M. Basch, MD, MSc, FASCO, Professor of Medicine at the Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Centre of the University of North Carolina, who was practising at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Centre in New York when the study was conducted.
“We show that using a web-based symptom reporting system that alerts the care team about problems leads to actions that alleviate suffering and improve patient outcomes.”
An earlier report from the same study showed that use of the tool was associated with better quality of life, and fewer visits to the emergency room and hospitalizations.
Compared to patients who received usual care, patients who used web-based symptom monitoring were also able to tolerate chemotherapy longer.
“The improvement in survival we saw may seem modest, but it is greater than the effect of many targeted cancer drugs for metastatic cancer,” said Dr. Basch.
About the Study
The study enrolled 766 patients with advanced solid tumours (genitourinary, gynecologic, breast, and lung) who were receiving outpatient chemotherapy.
The patients were randomly assigned to report their symptoms via tablet computers (intervention group) or to a group whose symptoms were monitored and documented by clinicians, as is usual care in clinical practise.
In the usual care group, patients discussed symptoms during visits with oncologists.
They were also encouraged to telephone the office between visits if any concerning symptoms arose.
On a weekly basis, patients in the intervention group reported on 12 common symptoms experienced during chemotherapy, including appetite loss, difficulty breathing, fatigue, hot flashes, nausea, and pain, and graded them on a 5-point scale.
The web-based tool, Symptom Tracking and Reporting or STAR, was developed for research purposes and is not commercially available.
Patients could report the symptoms remotely from home or at the doctor’s office during oncology or chemotherapy visits, using tablet computers or computer kiosks.
Doctors received symptom reports during visits, and nurses received email alerts when patients reported severe or worsening symptoms.
Key Findings
All patients in the intervention group, including those with little prior experience using the Internet, were willing and able to regularly report their symptoms via the web throughout chemotherapy.
Nurses took immediate clinical actions more than three-quarters of the time when patients reported severe or worsening symptoms.
Compared to patients who received usual care, patients who used the web tool to self-report symptoms had a longer median overall survival (31.2 months vs. 26 months).
Next Steps
These findings are being confirmed in a larger clinical trial, which uses an updated, more user-friendly online tool that works on both personal computers and mobile devices.
The study is being conducted in community practises across the United States.
“Symptom management is a central part of what oncology care teams do,” said Dr. Basch.
He noted that this study supports broader use of online tools in routine practise to enable patients to communicate symptoms to the care team in real time.
Watch the video interview here.
Source: ASCO 2017
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