Cargando…

Paper-Based Survivorship Care Plans May be Less Helpful for Cancer Patients Who Search for Disease-Related Information on the Internet: Results of the Registrationsystem Oncological Gynecology (ROGY) Care Randomized Trial

BACKGROUND: The Institute of Medicine recommends Survivorship Care Plans (SCPs) for all cancer survivors. However, it is unclear whether certain patient groups may or may not benefit from SCPs. OBJECTIVE: The aim was to assess whether the effects of an automatically generated paper SCP on patients’...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Nicolaije, Kim AH, Ezendam, Nicole PM, Pijnenborg, Johanna MA, Boll, Dorry, Vos, Maria Caroline, Kruitwagen, Roy FPM, van de Poll-Franse, Lonneke V
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4958141/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27392550
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.4914
_version_ 1782444276441939968
author Nicolaije, Kim AH
Ezendam, Nicole PM
Pijnenborg, Johanna MA
Boll, Dorry
Vos, Maria Caroline
Kruitwagen, Roy FPM
van de Poll-Franse, Lonneke V
author_facet Nicolaije, Kim AH
Ezendam, Nicole PM
Pijnenborg, Johanna MA
Boll, Dorry
Vos, Maria Caroline
Kruitwagen, Roy FPM
van de Poll-Franse, Lonneke V
author_sort Nicolaije, Kim AH
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The Institute of Medicine recommends Survivorship Care Plans (SCPs) for all cancer survivors. However, it is unclear whether certain patient groups may or may not benefit from SCPs. OBJECTIVE: The aim was to assess whether the effects of an automatically generated paper SCP on patients’ satisfaction with information provision and care, illness perceptions, and health care utilization were moderated by disease-related Internet use. METHODS: Twelve hospitals were randomized to either SCP care or usual care in the pragmatic cluster randomized Registrationsystem Oncological GYnecology (ROGY) Care trial. Newly diagnosed endometrial cancer patients completed questionnaires after diagnosis (N=221; response: 74.7%, 221/296), 6 months (n=158), and 12 months (n=147), including patients’ satisfaction with information provision and care, illness perceptions, health care utilization (how many times patients visited a medical specialist or primary care physician about their cancer in the past 6 months), and disease-related Internet use (whether patients used the Internet to look for information about cancer). RESULTS: In total, 80 of 221 (36.2%) patients used the Internet to obtain disease-related information. Disease-related Internet use moderated the SCP care effect on the amount of information received about the disease (P=.03) and medical tests (P=.01), helpfulness of the information (P=.01), and how well patients understood their illness (P=.04). All stratified analyses were not statistically significant. However, it appeared that patients who did not seek disease-related information on the Internet in the SCP care arm reported receiving more information about their disease (mean 63.9, SD 20.1 vs mean 58.3, SD 23.7) and medical tests (mean 70.6, SD 23.5 vs mean 64.7, SD 24.9), finding the information more helpful (76.7, SD 22.9 vs mean 67.8, SD 27.2; scale 0-100), and understanding their illness better (mean 6.6, SD 3.0 vs mean 6.1, SD 3.2; scale 1-10) than patients in the usual care arm did. In addition, although all stratified analyses were not significant, patients who did seek disease-related information on the Internet in the SCP care arm appeared to receive less information about their disease (mean 65.7, SD 23.4 vs mean 67.1, SD 20.7) and medical tests (mean 72.4, SD 23.5 vs mean 75.3, SD 21.6), did not find the information more helpful (mean 78.6, SD 21.2 vs mean 76.0, SD 22.0), and reported less understanding of their illness (mean 6.3, SD 2.8 vs mean 7.1, SD 2.7) than patients in the usual care arm did. CONCLUSIONS: Paper SCPs appear to improve the amount of information received about the disease and medical tests, the helpfulness of the information, and understanding of the illness for patients who do not search for disease-related information on the Internet. In contrast, paper SCPs do not seem beneficial for patients who do seek disease-related information on the Internet. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01185626; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01185626 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/6fpaMXsDn)
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4958141
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2016
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-49581412016-08-22 Paper-Based Survivorship Care Plans May be Less Helpful for Cancer Patients Who Search for Disease-Related Information on the Internet: Results of the Registrationsystem Oncological Gynecology (ROGY) Care Randomized Trial Nicolaije, Kim AH Ezendam, Nicole PM Pijnenborg, Johanna MA Boll, Dorry Vos, Maria Caroline Kruitwagen, Roy FPM van de Poll-Franse, Lonneke V J Med Internet Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: The Institute of Medicine recommends Survivorship Care Plans (SCPs) for all cancer survivors. However, it is unclear whether certain patient groups may or may not benefit from SCPs. OBJECTIVE: The aim was to assess whether the effects of an automatically generated paper SCP on patients’ satisfaction with information provision and care, illness perceptions, and health care utilization were moderated by disease-related Internet use. METHODS: Twelve hospitals were randomized to either SCP care or usual care in the pragmatic cluster randomized Registrationsystem Oncological GYnecology (ROGY) Care trial. Newly diagnosed endometrial cancer patients completed questionnaires after diagnosis (N=221; response: 74.7%, 221/296), 6 months (n=158), and 12 months (n=147), including patients’ satisfaction with information provision and care, illness perceptions, health care utilization (how many times patients visited a medical specialist or primary care physician about their cancer in the past 6 months), and disease-related Internet use (whether patients used the Internet to look for information about cancer). RESULTS: In total, 80 of 221 (36.2%) patients used the Internet to obtain disease-related information. Disease-related Internet use moderated the SCP care effect on the amount of information received about the disease (P=.03) and medical tests (P=.01), helpfulness of the information (P=.01), and how well patients understood their illness (P=.04). All stratified analyses were not statistically significant. However, it appeared that patients who did not seek disease-related information on the Internet in the SCP care arm reported receiving more information about their disease (mean 63.9, SD 20.1 vs mean 58.3, SD 23.7) and medical tests (mean 70.6, SD 23.5 vs mean 64.7, SD 24.9), finding the information more helpful (76.7, SD 22.9 vs mean 67.8, SD 27.2; scale 0-100), and understanding their illness better (mean 6.6, SD 3.0 vs mean 6.1, SD 3.2; scale 1-10) than patients in the usual care arm did. In addition, although all stratified analyses were not significant, patients who did seek disease-related information on the Internet in the SCP care arm appeared to receive less information about their disease (mean 65.7, SD 23.4 vs mean 67.1, SD 20.7) and medical tests (mean 72.4, SD 23.5 vs mean 75.3, SD 21.6), did not find the information more helpful (mean 78.6, SD 21.2 vs mean 76.0, SD 22.0), and reported less understanding of their illness (mean 6.3, SD 2.8 vs mean 7.1, SD 2.7) than patients in the usual care arm did. CONCLUSIONS: Paper SCPs appear to improve the amount of information received about the disease and medical tests, the helpfulness of the information, and understanding of the illness for patients who do not search for disease-related information on the Internet. In contrast, paper SCPs do not seem beneficial for patients who do seek disease-related information on the Internet. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01185626; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01185626 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/6fpaMXsDn) JMIR Publications 2016-07-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4958141/ /pubmed/27392550 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.4914 Text en ©Kim AH Nicolaije, Nicole PM Ezendam, Johanna MA Pijnenborg, Dorry Boll, Maria Caroline Vos, Roy FPM Kruitwagen, Lonneke V van de Poll-Franse. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 08.07.2016. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://www.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Nicolaije, Kim AH
Ezendam, Nicole PM
Pijnenborg, Johanna MA
Boll, Dorry
Vos, Maria Caroline
Kruitwagen, Roy FPM
van de Poll-Franse, Lonneke V
Paper-Based Survivorship Care Plans May be Less Helpful for Cancer Patients Who Search for Disease-Related Information on the Internet: Results of the Registrationsystem Oncological Gynecology (ROGY) Care Randomized Trial
title Paper-Based Survivorship Care Plans May be Less Helpful for Cancer Patients Who Search for Disease-Related Information on the Internet: Results of the Registrationsystem Oncological Gynecology (ROGY) Care Randomized Trial
title_full Paper-Based Survivorship Care Plans May be Less Helpful for Cancer Patients Who Search for Disease-Related Information on the Internet: Results of the Registrationsystem Oncological Gynecology (ROGY) Care Randomized Trial
title_fullStr Paper-Based Survivorship Care Plans May be Less Helpful for Cancer Patients Who Search for Disease-Related Information on the Internet: Results of the Registrationsystem Oncological Gynecology (ROGY) Care Randomized Trial
title_full_unstemmed Paper-Based Survivorship Care Plans May be Less Helpful for Cancer Patients Who Search for Disease-Related Information on the Internet: Results of the Registrationsystem Oncological Gynecology (ROGY) Care Randomized Trial
title_short Paper-Based Survivorship Care Plans May be Less Helpful for Cancer Patients Who Search for Disease-Related Information on the Internet: Results of the Registrationsystem Oncological Gynecology (ROGY) Care Randomized Trial
title_sort paper-based survivorship care plans may be less helpful for cancer patients who search for disease-related information on the internet: results of the registrationsystem oncological gynecology (rogy) care randomized trial
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4958141/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27392550
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.4914
work_keys_str_mv AT nicolaijekimah paperbasedsurvivorshipcareplansmaybelesshelpfulforcancerpatientswhosearchfordiseaserelatedinformationontheinternetresultsoftheregistrationsystemoncologicalgynecologyrogycarerandomizedtrial
AT ezendamnicolepm paperbasedsurvivorshipcareplansmaybelesshelpfulforcancerpatientswhosearchfordiseaserelatedinformationontheinternetresultsoftheregistrationsystemoncologicalgynecologyrogycarerandomizedtrial
AT pijnenborgjohannama paperbasedsurvivorshipcareplansmaybelesshelpfulforcancerpatientswhosearchfordiseaserelatedinformationontheinternetresultsoftheregistrationsystemoncologicalgynecologyrogycarerandomizedtrial
AT bolldorry paperbasedsurvivorshipcareplansmaybelesshelpfulforcancerpatientswhosearchfordiseaserelatedinformationontheinternetresultsoftheregistrationsystemoncologicalgynecologyrogycarerandomizedtrial
AT vosmariacaroline paperbasedsurvivorshipcareplansmaybelesshelpfulforcancerpatientswhosearchfordiseaserelatedinformationontheinternetresultsoftheregistrationsystemoncologicalgynecologyrogycarerandomizedtrial
AT kruitwagenroyfpm paperbasedsurvivorshipcareplansmaybelesshelpfulforcancerpatientswhosearchfordiseaserelatedinformationontheinternetresultsoftheregistrationsystemoncologicalgynecologyrogycarerandomizedtrial
AT vandepollfranselonnekev paperbasedsurvivorshipcareplansmaybelesshelpfulforcancerpatientswhosearchfordiseaserelatedinformationontheinternetresultsoftheregistrationsystemoncologicalgynecologyrogycarerandomizedtrial