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Trial Title:
Green Approach to Improved Nutritional Support for Cancer Patients
NCT ID:
NCT05544318
Condition:
Malnutrition
Conditions: Official terms:
Malnutrition
Study type:
Interventional
Study phase:
N/A
Overall status:
Recruiting
Study design:
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention model:
Parallel Assignment
Intervention model description:
Randomised controlled trial
Primary purpose:
Health Services Research
Masking:
None (Open Label)
Intervention:
Intervention type:
Other
Intervention name:
Diatary advices
Description:
Advice regarding energy, protein and nutrient intake during cancer treatment
Arm group label:
Intervention
Other name:
Usual care
Summary:
In this study, we aim to reduce the burden of malnutrition in cancer patients by
implementing and evaluating an improved nutritional support, using digital communication
and registration tools during the clinical pathway. The project targets a group of
patients with a high frequency of malnutrition, due to cancer and the subsequent therapy,
where knowledge on the efficient and cost-effective treatment is scarce. The effect of
the improved nutrition support will be evaluated in a randomised controlled trial, and
the primary endpoint is the prevalence of malnutrition. The long-term goal is to benefit
the patients by increasing the completion rate of cancer treatment, reducing the
infection rate, need for antibiotics, the total length of hospital stays and number of
non-elective re-admissions, and thus increasing the patients' quality of life and
survival. The project will be patient-orientated and result in a sustainable approach for
the management of malnutrition.
Detailed description:
WP1. Effect of the improved nutritional support
Task 1.1 Recruitment of participants
Consenting, eligible participants will be screened for malnutrition using NRS-2002 by the
PhD student, and randomised to intervention or control group stratified for malnutrition
risk. All participants will go through a baseline assessment at the Center for clinical
nutrition. Participants in the intervention group will be scheduled for a first dietitian
visit at the nutrition outpatient clinic at OUH, at the same day as the baseline
assessment.
Task 1.2 Intervention
Included in the green approach to improved nutritional support are:
- Individual dietitian support for patients at risk
- Self-monitoring of food intake and weight
Digital communication tools to enable frequent follow-up during the cancer treatment.
Patients at risk of malnutrition will be given individual goals on energy- and protein
intake, weight and body composition. The goals will be converted to specific, measurable
and acceptable guidance according to the motivational interview techniques.
Participants will be provided with a tablet computer to monitor dietary intake using the
FoodCapture system, intended for nutrition monitoring and follow-up. The interface of
FoodCapture consists of an app for mobile devices and a website and includes functions to
record, evaluate and document nutrition and generate reports for health professionals.
The technical development of the FoodCapture device is performed by the University Centre
for Information Technology (USIT) at the University of Oslo. A web form is used for data
flow in the app and data are sent to 'Services for sensitive data' (Tjenester for
sensitive data, TSD), both hosted by USIT. Information registered in the FoodCapture app
and the recordings of dietary intake are sent encrypted through the web form to TSD. The
TSD system is a high-security private cloud eInfrastructure to process and store
sensitive research data. It is included in NorStore, the Norwegian national
infrastructure for handling and storing scientific data (21).
All data recorded in the FoodCapture app are continuously sent to TSD. In cases of
technical problems or loss of internet connection, the data are stored temporarily in an
encrypted format before being sent to TSD when the device resumes an internet connection.
To gain access to the FoodCapture web report, healthcare professionals have to complete
an access form, that has to be approved by an administrator. Log-in to the webserver is
done through the common log-in solution to public services in Norway: ID-porten and
authentication is sent to the TSD server to verify access to the web report. The
FoodCapture tool is CE marked as a medical device class 1 and registered at the Norwegian
Medicines Agency.
Self-monitoring of weight will be facilitated by a digital scale, with a wireless
connection to the tablet computer. All data from the digital scale will be transferred to
"Services for Sensitive Data" (TSD) and then becomes available for the dietitian, who
contacts patients in need of support.
The intervention includes physical and digital follow-up sessions (telephone or
video-meetings) with the patient's personal dietician, who will be the main responsible
for the nutritional support throughout the clinical pathway. The patient follow-up
frequency will be customised, depending on the situation and the patient's needs, but
will at a minimum include one physical visits in addition to digital follow-ups during
the first 6 months.
Follow-up visits. All participants will be followed up after 6 months to assess
malnutrition status. The 12 months follow-up visit is included to evaluate the long-term
effect on quality of life and survival.
Sample size: Based on our previous experience with the effect of FoodCapture, we expect a
difference in the prevalence of malnutrition of 17 percentage points after 6 months. With
a statistical power of 80 % and a significance level of 5 %, we will need a total of 104
patients: 52 in each group to detect expected difference. To allow for a 20 % drop-out,
we will recruit 130 participants, and anticipate that the recruitment will last for about
7 months.
WP2. Implementation of improved nutritional support
WP2 will be conducted in close cooperation with the users, including patients, health
care professionals and next-of-kin. An implementation study will be performed before and
in parallel with the effect study (WP1), using a mixed-method approach with qualitative
and quantitative measurements. This WP consists of three tasks:
Task 2.1 First, we will explore the readiness and potential barriers and facilitators of
the improved nutritional support by using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation
Research. Data will be gathered in focus group discussions.
Task 2.2 The identified barriers and facilitators will be used to create a plan for the
implementation of the improved nutritional support. The plan will include implementation
strategies, like methods for stakeholder engagement, management support, training and
follow-up.
Task 2.3 Finally, we will study the implementation outcomes as described by Proctor et al
(30) and explore how the nutritional support is perceived among patients and their
next-of-kins. This will include acceptability and practical use of the nutritional
support and compatibility with the clinical pathway, if the intervention was delivered as
intended, and how the intervention can reach sustainability in the future. Data will be
gathered using online questionnaires, technical log-data, focus group discussions and
individual interviews
WP3. Economic evaluation on nutritional support
WP3 will be conducted in close cooperation with experts on health economics at the
Clinical Trial Unit at OUH. Economic evaluation is defined as the comparison of
alternative options in terms of cost and consequences (outcomes).
To calculate the economic impact of the improved nutritional support, based on the
results of WP1. We will perform a cost-utility analysis of the nutritional support
compared to standard routine care in cancer patients, taking a societal perspective. The
generic outcome is Quality adjusted life-years (QALYs) measured by the generic instrument
EQ-5D-5L. In order to generate QALYs, health utilities are needed. Utilities are
preference weights, measured on a scale from 0 (dead) and 1 (full health). Data will be
collected through self-reported measures and electronic patient records, and the health
economic analysis will include following costs:
Intervention related costs, mainly related to intervention implementation (introduction
to health care personnel and patients, maintenance (software and security updates) and
personnel costs due to follow-up.
Health care costs/direct costs, mainly related to use of health care services (including
primary care; general practitioner, physical therapy, psychology visits, secondary care;
hospitalization, readmission, outpatient visits, use of antibiotics, enteral and
parenteral nutrition products.
Societal costs/indirect costs, including work absence (i.e., productivity loss).
Criteria for eligibility:
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
Adults with primary:
- gynaecologic cancer with planned radiation therapy (ca. cervix)
- colorectal cancer
- lymphomas
Exclusion Criteria:
- Exclusion criteria are defined as patients admitted with TNM stage 4
- Terminal condition (life expectancy < 6 months).
Gender:
All
Minimum age:
18 Years
Maximum age:
N/A
Healthy volunteers:
No
Locations:
Facility:
Name:
University of Oslo
Address:
City:
Oslo
Zip:
0316
Country:
Norway
Status:
Recruiting
Contact:
Last name:
Christine Henriksen, PhD student
Phone:
+4722851526
Email:
christine.henriksen@medisin.uio.no
Start date:
October 1, 2022
Completion date:
June 30, 2024
Lead sponsor:
Agency:
University of Oslo
Agency class:
Other
Source:
University of Oslo
Record processing date:
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on November 12, 2024
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov page:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05544318