Bell-Brown Ari, Tawfik Bernard, Segarra-Vazquez Babara, Hopkins Talor, Watabayashi Kate, O'Kane Patricia, Carlos Ruth C, Langer Shelby L, Unger Joseph M, Darke Amy K, Hershman Dawn L, Ramsey Scott D, Shankaran Veena
Hutchinson Institute for Cancer Outcomes Research, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, Seattle, WA, USA.
Division of Hematology and Oncology, University of New Mexico Comprehensive Cancer Center, Albuquerque, NM, USA.
Cancer Control. 2025 Jan-Dec;32:10732748251344469. doi: 10.1177/10732748251344469. Epub 2025 May 19.
IntroductionCancer-related financial hardship is pervasive, impacting both patients and caregivers, making it crucial to address financial hardship at the household level. The CREDIT (S1912CD) study was designed to enroll and randomize cancer patients and spousal caregivers as dyads to proactive financial navigation compared to usual care. The study faced several challenges to recruitment. This paper discusses the changes made to successfully complete the study.MethodsThe study took place among NCI Community Oncology Research Program (NCORP) sites and allowed several venues for protocol feedback, including SWOG group meetings, NCORP administrator meetings, and individual calls with recruiting sites. A patient advocate worked with the study team to review and update documents to ensure the study was relevant and accessible to potential participants.ResultsSeveral barriers were identified including sites facing challenges in enrolling patient-spouse dyads, multiple financial navigation partners causing confusion and delays in delivery of the intervention, eligibility criteria concerns, and participant discomfort with providing social security numbers. Several modifications were made to address these obstacles during a study restructure, including making caregiver participation optional, streamlining intervention delivery, and modifying eligibility criteria to allow more time between diagnosis and enrollment. Changes from the restructure resulted, on average, in a 9.5 patient per month increase in accrual (4.1 to 13.6) and has enabled the study to reach overall accrual within the study timeline. Importantly, the study maintained diverse accrual and continued to accrue willing caregivers to enable exploratory analysis of caregiver outcomes.ConclusionInterventions examining how to mitigate financial hardship for cancer patients and those affected by cancer, must be pragmatic in order to be translated into sustainable programs in real world settings. Providing recruiting sites an avenue for feedback ensured that the study team could adjust the protocol to meet site needs and successfully complete this financial navigation study.
引言
癌症相关的经济困难普遍存在,影响着患者及其照料者,因此在家庭层面解决经济困难至关重要。CREDIT(S1912CD)研究旨在招募癌症患者及其配偶照料者组成二元组,并将其随机分配至积极的财务指导组,与常规护理进行对比。该研究在招募方面面临诸多挑战。本文讨论了为成功完成该研究所做的改变。
方法
该研究在国立癌症研究所社区肿瘤学研究项目(NCORP)的各站点开展,并提供了多个获取方案反馈的途径,包括西南肿瘤协作组(SWOG)小组会议、NCORP管理员会议以及与招募站点的单独通话。一名患者权益倡导者与研究团队合作,审查并更新文件,以确保该研究对潜在参与者具有相关性且易于理解。
结果
确定了几个障碍,包括各站点在招募患者-配偶二元组时面临挑战、多个财务指导合作伙伴导致干预实施出现混乱和延误、对资格标准的担忧以及参与者对提供社会保障号码感到不适。在研究重组期间,为解决这些障碍进行了多项修改,包括使照料者参与变为可选择、简化干预实施流程,以及修改资格标准,以便在诊断和入组之间留出更多时间。重组带来的改变平均使每月入组患者增加了9.5例(从4.1例增至13.6例),并使该研究能够在研究时间范围内达到总体入组目标。重要的是,该研究保持了多样化的入组情况,并继续招募愿意参与的照料者,以便对照料者的结果进行探索性分析。
结论
研究如何减轻癌症患者及受癌症影响者经济困难的干预措施必须切实可行,以便在现实环境中转化为可持续的项目。为招募站点提供反馈渠道可确保研究团队能够调整方案以满足站点需求,并成功完成这项财务指导研究。