Abstract
Purpose: Few digital interventions target patients with advanced cancer. Hence, we feasibility-tested Finding My Way-Advanced (FMW-A), a self-guided program for women with metastatic breast cancer. Methods: A single-site randomised controlled pilot trial was conducted. Participants were recruited through clinicians, professional networks, and social media and randomised to intervention or usual-care control. Participants were randomly allocated to either the intervention (FMW-A; a 6-week, 6-module CBT-based online self-directed psychosocial program for women with MBC + usual care resources) or control (usual care resources: BCNA’s Hope and Hurdles kit). Feasibility outcomes included rates of recruitment, uptake, engagement, and attrition. Distress, QOL, and unmet needs were evaluated for signals of efficacy, and qualitative feedback was collected to assess acceptability. Results: Due to COVID-19 and funding constraints, the target recruitment of 40 was not reached (n = 60 approached; n = 55 eligible; n = 35 consented). Uptake was high (n = 35/55; 63.6%), engagement modest (median 3/6 modules per user), and attrition acceptable (66% completed post-treatment). Efficacy signals were mixed: compared to controls, FMW-A participants experienced small improvements in fear of progression (d = 0.21) and global QOL (d = 0.22) and demonstrated a trend towards improvements in cancer-specific distress (d = 0.13) and role functioning (d = 0.18). However, FMW-A participants experienced small-to-moderate deteriorations in general distress (d = 0.23), mental QOL (d = 0.51), and social functioning (d = 0.27), whereas controls improved. Qualitatively, participants (n = 4) were satisfied with the program, perceived it as appropriate, but noted some sections could evoke transient distress. Conclusion: The study demonstrated feasibility (high uptake and acceptable retention) and generated realistic recruitment estimates. While FMW-A appears promising for targeting cancer-specific distress and fear of progression, the mixed findings in quality of life and general distress warrant further revisions and testing.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 744 |
| Pages (from-to) | 1-13 |
| Number of pages | 13 |
| Journal | Supportive Care in Cancer |
| Volume | 32 |
| Issue number | 11 |
| Early online date | 22 Oct 2024 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Nov 2024 |
Keywords
- Online intervention
- Metastatic breast cancer
- QOL
- Distress
- CBT
- Self-guided
- Patient Acceptance of Health Care/psychology
- Humans
- Middle Aged
- Psychosocial Intervention/methods
- Internet-Based Intervention
- COVID-19/psychology
- Feasibility Studies
- Neoplasm Metastasis
- Pilot Projects
- Breast Neoplasms/psychology
- Quality of Life
- Adult
- Female
- Aged
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/methods