Mougalian Sarah S, Epstein Lianne N, Jhaveri Ami P, Han Gang, Abu-Khalaf Maysa, Hofstatter Erin W, DiGiovanna Michael P, Silber Andrea L M, Adelson Kerin, Pusztai Lajos, Gross Cary P
Sarah S. Mougalian, Lianne N. Epstein, Erin W. Hofstatter, Michael P. DiGiovanna, Andrea L.M. Silber, Kerin Adelson, Lajos Pusztai, and Cary P. Gross, Yale Cancer Center, Yale University; Sarah S. Mougalian, Kerin Adelson, and Cary P. Gross, Yale Cancer Outcomes, Public Policy, and Effectiveness Research Center, Yale University, New Haven, CT; Ami P. Jhaveri, Lancaster General Health, Penn Medicine, Lancaster; Maysa Abu-Khalaf, Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA; and Gang Han, Texas A&M University School of Public Health, College Station, TX.
JCO Clin Cancer Inform. 2017 Nov;1:1-10. doi: 10.1200/CCI.17.00015.
Up to 40% of patients with breast cancer may not adhere to adjuvant endocrine therapy. Therapy-related adverse effects (AEs) are important contributors to nonadherence. We developed a bidirectional text-message application, BETA-Text, that simultaneously tracks adherence, records symptoms, and alerts the clinical team.
We piloted our intervention in 100 patients. The intervention consisted of text messages to which patients responded for 3 months: daily, evaluating adherence; weekly, evaluating medication-related AEs; and monthly, regarding barriers to adherence. Concerning responses prompted a telephone call from a clinic nurse. The primary objective was to assess patient acceptance of this intervention using self-reported surveys. To compare participants with the general population at our institution, we assessed 100 consecutively treated patients as historical controls using medical record review.
We approached 141 consecutive patients, 100 (71%) of whom agreed to participate and 89 of whom completed the intervention. A majority of patients reported that the intervention was easy to use (98%) and helpful in taking their medication (96%). Four patients discontinued therapy before 3 months, and 93% of patients who continued therapy took ≥ 80% of their medication. The frequency of AEs reported by participants via text was higher than that reported in clinical trials: hot flashes (72%), arthralgias (53%), and vaginal symptoms (35%). Approximately 39% of patients reported one or more severe AE that prompted an alert to the provider team to call the patient.
A daily bidirectional text-messaging system can monitor adherence and identify AEs and other barriers to adherence in real time without inconveniencing patients. AEs of endocrine therapy, as detected using this texting approach, are more prevalent than reported in clinical trials.
高达40%的乳腺癌患者可能不坚持辅助内分泌治疗。与治疗相关的不良反应是导致不坚持治疗的重要因素。我们开发了一种双向短信应用程序BETA-Text,它可以同时跟踪治疗依从性、记录症状并向临床团队发出警报。
我们在100名患者中对我们的干预措施进行了试点。干预措施包括患者在3个月内回复的短信:每天评估依从性;每周评估与药物相关的不良反应;每月评估依从性障碍。针对相关回复,诊所护士会致电患者。主要目标是通过自我报告调查评估患者对该干预措施的接受程度。为了将参与者与我们机构的普通人群进行比较,我们使用病历审查评估了100名连续接受治疗的患者作为历史对照。
我们接触了141名连续患者,其中100名(71%)同意参与,89名完成了干预。大多数患者报告称该干预措施易于使用(98%)且有助于他们服药(96%)。4名患者在3个月前停止治疗,继续治疗的患者中有93%服用了≥80%的药物。参与者通过短信报告的不良反应发生率高于临床试验报告的发生率:潮热(72%)、关节痛(53%)和阴道症状(35%)。约39%的患者报告了一种或多种严重不良反应,这促使向医疗团队发出警报并致电患者。
每日双向短信系统可以监测依从性,并实时识别不良反应及其他依从性障碍,而不会给患者带来不便。使用这种短信方式检测到的内分泌治疗不良反应比临床试验报告的更为普遍。