Study protocol for a single-site feasibility study evaluating the adoption and fidelity of Prep-4-RT: prehabilitation for head and neck cancer patients undergoing radiotherapy
- Author(s)
- Ray, H; Sexton, E; Frowen, J; Gough, K; Turnbull, S; Abo, S; Ftanou, M; Loeliger, J;
- Details
- Publication Year 2024-08-02,Volume 10,Issue #1,Page 106
- Journal Title
- Pilot and Feasibility Studies
- Publication Type
- Protocol
- Abstract
- INTRODUCTION: Prep-4-RT is a co-designed stepped-care multimodal prehabilitation program for people scheduled to receive radiotherapy for head and neck cancer (HNC). Prehabilitation, which occurs between diagnosis and treatment commencement, aims to improve a patient's health to reduce the incidence and severity of current and future impairments. HNC treatment can be distressing and has detrimental impacts on function and quality of life. HNC patients have increased social vulnerabilities including higher rates of socio-economic disadvantage and engagement in lifestyle habits which increase cancer risk. High levels of physical and psychological impacts of HNC treatment and increased social vulnerabilities of this population warrant investigation of optimal pathways of care, such as prehabilitation. This paper describes a research protocol to evaluate the feasibility of Prep-4-RT, which was designed to prepare HNC patients for the physical and psychological impacts of radiotherapy. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: At least sixty adult HNC patients, scheduled to receive radiotherapy (with or without chemotherapy), will be recruited over a five-month period. All participants will receive access to Prep-4-RT self-management resources. Participants identified through screening as high-risk will also be offered individualised interventions with relevant allied health professionals prior to the commencement of radiotherapy (psychologists, dietitians, speech pathologists and physiotherapists). Participants will complete evaluation surveys assessing their experiences with Prep-4-RT resources and interventions. Clinicians will also complete program evaluation surveys. Primary feasibility outcomes include adoption (uptake and intention to try) and fidelity (adherence to the specialist prehabilitation pathway). Secondary feasibility outcomes include acceptability (patient and clinician) of and satisfaction (patient) with Prep-4-RT as well as operational costs. Feasibility outcome data will be analysed using exact binomial and one-sample t tests, as appropriate. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Ethics approval has been obtained at the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre in Melbourne, Australia. Results will be presented at national conferences and published in peer-reviewed journal(s) so that it can be accessed by clinicians involved in the care of HNC patients receiving radiotherapy. If the model of care is found to be feasible and acceptable, the transferability and scalability to other cancer centres, or for other cancer types, may be investigated. REGISTRATION DETAILS: ANZCTA (Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry) ACTRN12623000770662.
- Publisher
- BioMed Central
- Keywords
- Head and neck cancer; Multimodal; Nutrition and dietetics; Physiotherapy; Prehabilitation; Psychology; Radiotherapy; Speech pathology; Stepped-care
- Department(s)
- Nutrition and Speech Pathology; Psychosocial Oncology; Health Services Research; Physiotherapy
- Publisher's Version
- https://doi.org/10.1186/s40814-024-01531-2
- Open Access at Publisher's Site
- https://doi.org/10.1186/s40814-024-01531-2
- Terms of Use/Rights Notice
- Refer to copyright notice on published article.
Creation Date: 2024-09-03 05:21:07
Last Modified: 2024-09-03 05:25:14