Managing Cancer and Living Meaningfully (CALM) Adapted to Italian Cancer Care Setting
NCT ID: NCT03068013
Last Updated: 2024-07-03
Study Results
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Basic Information
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RECRUITING
NA
171 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2018-10-11
2024-12-31
Brief Summary
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Methods/Design: The study is a single-blinded randomized controlled trial with 2 conditions: CALM intervention versus nonspecific supportive intervention (SPI) and assessments at baseline, 3 and 6 months. The coordinating site is the Program on Psycho-Oncology and Psychiatry in Palliative Care, University of Ferrara and Integrated Department of Mental Health, S. Anna University Hospital, in Ferrara, Italy. Another centre from northern and southern Italy will collaborate. Eligibility criteria include: ≥ 18 years of age; Italian fluency; no cognitive impairment; and diagnosis of advanced cancer. The intervention consists of 12 sessions , following the CALM manual and allowing for flexibility to meet individual patients' needs. It is delivered over a 6-month period and provides reflective space for patients (and their primary caregivers) to address 4 main domains: symptom management and communication with health care providers; changes in self and relations with close others; sense of meaning and purpose; and the future and mortality. The primary outcome is depression and the primary endpoint is at 6 months. Secondary outcomes include demoralization, generalized anxiety, death anxiety, spiritual well-being, quality of life, attachment security, posttraumatic growth, communication with partners, and satisfaction with clinical interactions.
Discussion: This trial is being conducted to determine the effectiveness of CALM in an Italian cancer setting. The intervention has potential cross-national relevance and, if shown to be effective, has the potential to be disseminated as a new approach in oncology to relieve distress and promote psychological well-being in patients with advanced cancer.
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Detailed Description
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Interventions:Patients in the experimental group will receive the CALM intervention, a semi-structured psychotherapy designed for patients with advanced cancer. In this Italian adaptation, CALM consists of 12 individual sessions (45-60 minutes each), instead of the original 6 sessions. The sessions are delivered bimonthly over a period of 6 months.
The intervention covers four domains: 1) Symptom management and communication with health care providers; 2) Changes in self and relations with close others; 3) Spiritual well-being, sense of meaning and purpose; 4) Preparing for the future, sustaining hope and facing mortality.
Non-manualized supportive psycho-oncology intervention (SPI):The Control group intervention includes counseling, information, crisis intervention, which is the usual care intervention provided in our center. As with CALM patients, SPI patients receive up to twelve sessions of individual therapy during a period of 6 months.
Inclusion criteria are:18 years of age or more;fluency in Italian language; absence of cognitive deficit documented in the clinical records;diagnosis of "wet" stage IIIB or IV lung cancer; any stage of pancreatic cancer, stage III or IV ovarian and fallopian tube cancers, or other stage IV gynecological cancer; and stage IV breast, genitourinary, gastrointestinal, melanoma, sarcoma, or endocrine cancers (all with an expected survival of 12-18 months); a score ≥10 at the Patient Health Questionnaire and/or ≥ 20 at the Death and Dying Distress Scale. Exclusion criteria are: language barriers hindering psychotherapy;inability to commit to the required 12 sessions; concomitant psychotherapy.
Randomization procedure:Study participants are randomly assigned to receive either CALM or SPI. After obtaining informed consent , a research assistant includes patient's data on the random allocation list and informs the PI's about treatment allocation (CALM or SPI). The patient is not informed about treatment condition (CaLM or SPI).
Measures:The Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) is a 9-item measure of depression. It is composed by nine items, reflecting DSM-IV criteria for major depression. A four-point Likert scale scores from 0 (not at all) to 3 (nearly every day), with a cut-off score of ≥10 suggesting depression. For study purposes, two additional items assessing self-harm intention and rating how difficult these symptoms have made it to do lead one's life, have been included.The Demoralization Scale (DS) is a 24-item self-report tool assessing demoralization components of loss of meaning and purpose, dysphoria, disheartenment and helplessness. Items are scored on a five-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (never) to 4 (all the time). Low levels of demoralization were indicated by a score 10, moderate demoralization by a score 11-36, and high demoralization by a score \> 37.The Generalized Anxiety Disorder Questionnaire (GAD-7) is a 7-item self-report instrument screening the severity of GAD symptoms. Items are scored on a four-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (not at all) to 3 (nearly every day). Scores ≤4 indicate absence of anxiety, scores from 5 to 9 suggest that mild anxiety is present, and scores from 10 to 15 indicate moderate levels of anxiety. An eighth item rating how difficult these symptoms have made it to lead one's daily life has been included. The Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Spiritual Well-Being Scale (FACIT-SP)\[v\] is a 12-item self-report tool, exploring spiritual well-being, in terms of sense of meaning, faith and inner peace. Items are scored on a five-point Likert scale from 0 (not at all) to 4 (very much), with higher scores indicating a greater spiritual wellbeing.The Posttraumatic Growth Inventory (PTGI) is a 21-item self-report measure of positive psychological changes after traumatic events. It consists of four subscales: New Possibilities, Appreciation of Life, Relating to Others and Spiritual Change. Items are scored on a three-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (not at all) to 2 (very much) with higher scores indicating greater post-traumatic growth.The Quality of Life at the End of Life-Cancer Scale (QUAL-EC) is a self- report measure of quality of life in patients near the end of life. It originally consists of four subscales: Symptom Control, Relationship with Health Care Providers, Preparation for End of Life and Life Completion. For this study purposes, the symptom control subscale is not included, thus only items 4-17 are used. Items are scored on a five-point Likert scale ranging from 1 (not at all) to 5 (completely), with higher scores indicating higher quality of life.The Death and Dying Distress Scale (DADDS), is a 15-item self-report measure assessing specific concerns of advanced cancer patients about end of life, feeling a burden to others and wasted opportunities. It is scored on a six-point Likert scale from 0 (no distress) to 5 (very much distress), with higher scores indicating higher death anxiety and distress.The Experiences in Close Relationships Inventory Modified Short Form Version (ECR-M16), is used in its 16-item self-report form to measure the attachment style. The scale yields scores on two dimensions of attachment: avoidance and anxiety. Items are scored on a seven-point Likert scale ranging from 1 (disagree) to 7 (agree), with a total sum score on each subscale ranging from 16 to 56. Higher scores on both subscales indicate higher attachment insecurity.The Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale (MSAS) \[x\]assesses the disease symptom severity. The scale, in its shortened version (MSAS- short form), measures the presence and severity of 28 common physical symptoms of cancer. Items are scored on a five-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (not at all) to 4 (very much).
The Couple Communication Scale (CCS) is used for participants who have a partner. The 10-item CCS taken from the PREPARE/ENRICH Inventory is concerned with an individual's feelings, beliefs, and attitudes about the communication in his/her romantic relationship. Each item is scored from 1 (strongly disagree) to 5 (strongly agree).
Intervention and control participants will complete the Clinical Evaluation Questionnaire (CEQ) at 3 and 6-months. The CEQ is a seven-item self-report questionnaire which assesses the amount of clinical benefit patients have experienced by from therapy at the time of the assessment. Items are rated from 0 to 4, with 0 (no clinical benefit) and 4 (a great clinical benefit).Satisfaction of patients will also be qualitatively assessed by inviting them to share comments in a written form after completing CEQ questionnaire.
Assessment:At baseline (T0), participants provide demographics and medical and treatment data using a standardized questionnaire and will complete all outcome measures, with the exception of the CEQ. The PHQ-9 and DADDS are first administered to assess eligibility prior to study entry, followed by the remaining baseline outcomes. Follow-up assessments on all outcomes are collected at three months (T1) and six months (T2). The CEQ is administered only at three months (T1) and six months (T2) as it is an evaluation of the intervention received to date. At T2, participants will also be queried about their having remained blind (or not) to randomization.
Statistical methods:To calculate the required sample size, we used a validated, manualized online power and sample size calculator that is ideal for longitudinal multilevel designs, GLIMMPSE \[ \]. A total sample size estimate for our primary hypothesis, that the treatment group (CALM) will demonstrate a greater higher improvement ind depressive symptoms (PHQ-9) at follow-up periods, as compared to the control group (SPI), was derived with a target power of 80% and alpha of .05 and with estimated mean scores, with variability, and cross-time correlations entered. For the primary hypothesis, the calculated total sample size is 124 patients (62 patients per treatment arm). To account for anticipated attrition while maintaining the targeted power, we used the following equation to calculated an adjusted sample size: N = N0 \* (1 + DRP), where N0 = original estimated sample size required at baseline; DRP = anticipated dropout rate across participants. For an anticipated completion rate of 70% rate (30% dropout rate), the adjusted sample size for this attrition rate is N = 124 \* (1 + .30) = 161.2. The adjusted sample size at baseline will therefore be 162, with 81 patients per treatment arm.
Statistical analyses will be carried out by using SPSS Statistics program. For the final analyses we will use an intention-to-treat approach (ITT) and compare patients in the assigned treatment arms. To test the pPrimary hypothesis : we hypothesize that mean depression scores in the intervention arm will be lower than in the control arm at 3 and 6 months, . We will use multilevel modeling (MLM) with maximum likelihood estimation to conduct the intent-to-treat analysis in testing hypotheses. MLM includes all participants, including those with missing data, in model estimation and also accounts for both inter-center and intra-center variability.To test for treatment-arm differences, we will compare the CALM and SPI groups on the primary outcome of PHQ-9 scores and on the secondary outcomes at the follow-up periods. This will entail the following set of MLM analyses:i)We will first test the level-1 predictor of Time, coded for the primary hypothesis as a categorical variable representing baseline and the 6-month follow-up period (primary endpoint). To code time for tests of secondary hypotheses, the categorical time variable will include baseline and the 3-month (secondary endpoint) and 6-month follow-up periods. ii)Next, we will add the level-2 treatment-group main effect and the cross-level treatment group x time interactions to test the hypothesized treatment-group differences at follow-up periods. Pairwise comparisons will evaluate the treatment-group difference at each follow-up period.iii)We will finally test whether the fixed effects in step ii change when any identified covariates are added to control for their effects. As a sensitivity analysis, we will use multiple imputation to examine the influence of missing values. Lastly, prior trial results suggest that there may be arm differences in the processing of death-related distress such that individuals with moderate death anxiety tend to be more responsive to the intervention than either those with low death anxiety (approximately the lower third of the distribution) or those with high death anxiety (the upper third). We will conduct a sub-analysis to confirm this effect, by examining the effect of removing individuals with low and high death anxiety scores at baseline (i.e., DADDS \< 15), following the Canadian protocol.
We will also qualitatively analyze the participants' comments about CALM and SPI on the CEQ. NVivo Plus software package will be used for the qualitative analysis of data.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Managing Cancer Living Meaningfully
Patients in the experimental group will receive the brief, individual, manualized CALM intervention, a semi-structured psychotherapy designed for patients with advanced cancer. CALM was developed based on empirical results, clinical observation and the theoretical foundations of supportive-expressive and existential approaches, as well psychodynamic and attachment theories. The sessions are delivered bimonthly over a period of 6 months. Sessions are reviewed to ensure treatment fidelity.
CALM
CALM intervention covers four domains, namely: 1) Symptom management and communication with health care providers; 2) Changes in self and relations with close others, 3) Spiritual well-being, sense of meaning and purpose, 4) Preparing for the future, sustaining hope and facing mortality
Supportive psycho-oncology intervention
Supportive psycho-oncology intervention (SPI) includes counseling, psychoeducation and crisis intervention, which is the usual care intervention provided in our centres.
SPI
Active Comparator: Supportive psycho-oncology intervention Supportive psycho-oncology intervention (SPI) includes counseling, psychoeducation and crisis intervention, which is the usual care intervention provided in our centres.
Interventions
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CALM
CALM intervention covers four domains, namely: 1) Symptom management and communication with health care providers; 2) Changes in self and relations with close others, 3) Spiritual well-being, sense of meaning and purpose, 4) Preparing for the future, sustaining hope and facing mortality
SPI
Active Comparator: Supportive psycho-oncology intervention Supportive psycho-oncology intervention (SPI) includes counseling, psychoeducation and crisis intervention, which is the usual care intervention provided in our centres.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. fluency in Italian language;
3. no cognitive impairment;
4. confirmed or working diagnosis of "wet" stage IIIB (those not treated with curative intent) or IV lung cancer; any stage of pancreatic or stage IV GI cancer, stage III or IV ovarian and fallopian tube cancers, or other stage IV gynecological cancer; and stage IV breast, genitourinary, sarcoma, melanoma or endocrine cancers (expected survival of 12-18 months); a score ≥10 at the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ9) or ≥ 20 at the Death and Dying Distress Scale (DDAS). -
Exclusion Criteria
2. inability to commit to the required 6 sessions (i.e., too ill to participate, lack of transportation, etc.);
3. actively seeing a psychotherapist, and
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Princess Margaret Hospital, Canada
OTHER
University Health Network, Toronto
OTHER
Università degli Studi di Ferrara
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Luigi Grassi
Professor and Chair of Psychiatry
Principal Investigators
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Luigi Grassi, M.D.
Role: STUDY_CHAIR
Istituto di Psichiatria. Università degli Studi di Ferrara
Rosangela Caruso, M.D., PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Istituto di Psichiatria. Università degli Studi di Ferrara
Locations
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Università di Ferrara
Ferrara, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Luigi Grassi, MD
Role: primary
References
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Other Identifiers
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FAR-2015
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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