Back to Search Start Over

A Comprehensive Lifestyle Randomized Clinical Trial: Design and Initial Patient Experience

Authors :
Banu Arun MD
Taylor Austin BA
Gildy V. Babiera MD
Karen Basen-Engquist MPH, PhD
Cindy L. Carmack PhD
Alejandro Chaoul PhD
Lorenzo Cohen PhD
Lisa Connelly MEd, LPC
Robin Haddad MPH
Carol Harrison MEd
Yisheng Li PhD
Smitha Mallaiah BS, DYSc, YICC
Raghuram Nagarathna PhD, MD
Patricia A. Parker PhD
George H. Perkins MD
James M. Reuben MBA, PhD
Ya-Chen Tina Shih PhD
Amy Spelman PhD
Anil Sood MD
Peiying Yang ME, MS, PhD
Sai-Ching J. Yeung R Ph, MS, PhD, MD, FACP
Source :
Integrative Cancer Therapies, Vol 16 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
SAGE Publishing, 2017.

Abstract

Background: Although epidemiological research demonstrates that there is an association between lifestyle factors and risk of breast cancer recurrence, progression of disease, and mortality, no comprehensive lifestyle change clinical trials have been conducted to determine if changing multiple risk factors leads to changes in biobehavioral processes and clinical outcomes in women with breast cancer. This article describes the design, feasibility, adherence to the intervention and data collection, and patient experience of a comprehensive lifestyle change clinical trial (CompLife). Methods: CompLife is a randomized, controlled trial of a multiple-behavior intervention focusing on diet, exercise, and mind-body practice along with behavioral counseling to support change. The initial exposure to the intervention takes place during the 4 to 6 weeks of radiotherapy (XRT) for women with stage III breast cancer and then across the subsequent 12 months. The intervention group will have 42 hours of in-person lifestyle counseling during XRT (7-10 hours a week) followed by up to 30 hours of counseling via video connection for the subsequent 12 months (weekly sessions for 6 months and then monthly for 6 months). The primary outcome is disease-free survival. Multiple secondary outcomes are being evaluated, including: (1) biological pathways; (2) overall survival; (3) patient-reported outcomes; (4) dietary patterns/fitness levels, anthropometrics, and body composition; and (5) economic outcomes. Qualitative data of the patient experience in the trial is collected from exit interviews, concluding remarks, direct email correspondences, and web postings from patients. Results: Fifty-five patients have been recruited and randomized to the trial to date. Accrual of eligible patients is high (72%) and dropout rates extremely low (5%). Attendance to the in-person sessions is high (95% attending greater than 80% of sessions) as well as to the 30 hours of video counseling (88% attending more than 70% of sessions). Adherence to components of the behavior change intervention is high and compliance with the intensive amount of data collection is exceptional. Qualitative data collected from the participants reveals testimonials supporting the importance of the comprehensive nature of intervention, especially the mind-body/mindfulness component and social support, and meaningful lifestyle transformations. Conclusion: Conducting a comprehensive, multicomponent, lifestyle change clinical trial for women with breast was feasible and collection of biobehavioral outcomes successful. Adherence to behavior change was high and patient experience was overwhelmingly positive.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15347354 and 1552695X
Volume :
16
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Integrative Cancer Therapies
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.78fd5aefbf0c42029fdc45fc41c61a14
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/1534735416679516