Single-arm Phase II Study of NDURE for Patients With HNC

Sponsor
Medical University of South Carolina (Other)
Overall Status
Completed
CT.gov ID
NCT03821064
Collaborator
(none)
11
1
1
5.6
2

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

This study will evaluate whether a new patient navigation intervention can decrease delays starting post-operative radiation therapy after surgery for white and African-American head and neck cancer patients.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Other: Patient Navigation
N/A

Detailed Description

This study will evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, preliminary clinical impact, and preliminary behavioral impact of NDURE (Navigation for Disparities and Untimely Radiation thErapy), our multi-level, theory-based navigation intervention to improve timely, equitable post-operative radiation treatment (PORT) among Head and Neck Cancer (HNC) patients. We hypothesize that NDURE will be feasible, acceptable, improve the timeliness of PORT for white and African American (AA) HNC patients and decrease disparities in delay between the two groups by improving system-, interpersonal-, and individual-level health behavior constructs.

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Actual Enrollment :
11 participants
Allocation:
N/A
Intervention Model:
Single Group Assignment
Masking:
None (Open Label)
Primary Purpose:
Treatment
Official Title:
Single-arm, Phase II Study Evaluating the Clinical Impact of Navigation on Delays and Racial Disparities Starting Postoperative Radiation Therapy for Adults With Locally Advanced Head and Neck Cancer: The NDURE Study
Actual Study Start Date :
Jun 3, 2019
Actual Primary Completion Date :
Nov 21, 2019
Actual Study Completion Date :
Nov 21, 2019

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Experimental: Patient Navigation

45 patients (15 African American, 30 white) will interact with a patient navigator three times over three months to identify and address barriers before they cause breakdowns in care delivery, employing resources, education, and care coordination from the day of surgery until post-operative radiation treatment begins.

Other: Patient Navigation
NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcome Measures

  1. Percent of Patients With a Delay Starting Post-Operative Radiation Treatment [6 weeks]

    Percent of patients who start PORT >6 weeks after surgery. Initiation of postoperative PORT > 6 weeks after surgery is defined as more than 42 calendar days from the time of the definitive surgical resection to the initiation of radiation therapy. In situations in which the surgical management of the primary tumor and the neck are staged (i.e. occur on two different calendar days), the date of the surgery for the primary tumor will be used. In situations in which an additional surgical resection is required (e.g. re-resection of positive margins to clear residual disease), the date of the earlier (i.e. attempted definitive) surgical procedure will be used to determine the target start date for PORT.

Secondary Outcome Measures

  1. Percent Difference in PORT Delay Between White and AA HNC Patients. [6 weeks]

    The difference in the rate of initiation of PORT > 6 weeks after surgery between white and AA HNC patients (i.e., the difference in the percentage of white and AA participants who initiate PORT >6 weeks after surgery)

  2. Median Difference in Time-to-PORT, in Days, Between White and African American HNC Patients [12 weeks]

    Median difference in time-to-PORT, defined as the difference in number of days from surgery to initiation of PORT between white and AA HNC patients

  3. Time-to-PORT [12 weeks]

    Days between surgery and the start of PORT is defined as the time, in days, between the date of definitive surgical resection to the initiation of radiation therapy. All of the criteria used to adjudicate the date of the definitive surgical procedure described for the primary outcome measure will be applied to this measure.

  4. Percent of Patients With Pre-Surgical Radiation Consultation [12 weeks]

    Percent of patients with pre-surgical radiation consultation as defined as the attendance by the patient at a consultation with a radiation oncologist (at MUSC or elsewhere) prior to surgery to discuss RT in the definitive or adjuvant setting.

  5. Percent of Patients With On-time Pre-Radiation Therapy Dental Extractions [12 weeks]

    Percent of patients with on-time dental extractions, defined as the extraction of teeth prior to discharge from the index hospitalization for the definitive surgical procedure. Patients who are edentulous are not evaluable for this measure.

  6. Percent of Patients Surgery to Pathology Reports </= 7 Days [12 weeks]

    Surgery to Pathology Report </= 7 days is defined as the production of the pathology report from the definitive surgical procedure within the electronic medical record (EMR) within 7 calendar days of the definitive surgical procedure. Addenda to the pathology report at the request of the HNC team (e.g. tumor p16 status) are not counted in this measure.

  7. Percent of Patients With Referral to PORT Within 10 Days of Surgery [12 weeks]

    Percent of patients with surgery to PORT referral </= 10 days, defined as the placement of a referral for PORT, at MUSC or elsewhere, within 10 calendar days of the definitive surgical procedure.

  8. Percent of Patients With RT Consult Within 10 Days of RT Referral [12 weeks]

    Percent of patients with RT Referral to Consult </= 10 days, defined as the evaluation of the patient at a postoperative consultation with a radiation oncologist within 10 calendar days of the referral being placed (or postoperative appointment being scheduled in cases in which care has been established and the return visit is no longer a consultation). The consultation may occur in the clinic or the hospital depending upon clinical circumstances.

  9. Percent of Patients With Initiation of RT Within 21 Days of Consultation [12 weeks]

    Percent of patients with RT Consult to Initiation </= 21 days, defined as the initiation of PORT within 21 calendar days of the patient being evaluated by a radiation oncologist for PORT.

  10. Barriers Resolved [12 weeks]

    The number of barriers identified by the navigator that are resolved during the NDURE intervention, as determined by the navigator log.

  11. Change in Self-Efficacy in Cancer Care Score From Baseline to End-of-study [12 weeks]

    The Communication and Attitudinal Self-Efficacy Scale for Cancer-12 (CASE-cancer) measures self-efficacy within the context of productive communication and positive attitude for cancer patients. It is a psychometrically sound tool that may provide new information on important mediating factors of cancer care. The response scale ranges from 1 to 4 points (1= strongly disagree, 2=slightly disagree, 3=slightly agree, 4=strongly disagree). The twelve question scale is divided into 3 domains with 4 questions each. Scores from these subscales are added to compute a total score ranging from 12-48. Higher values represent a more positive attitude.

  12. Barriers Unresolved [12 weeks]

    The number of barriers identified by the navigator that are not resolved during the NDURE intervention, as determined by the navigator log.

  13. Percent of Eligible Participants Who Accrue to NDURE [13 months]

    Percent of eligible participants who accrue to NDURE, defined as a participant who meets all inclusion criteria and no exclusion criteria

  14. Percentage of Enrolled Participants Who Complete NDURE [13 months]

    Percentage of enrolled participants who complete NDURE, defined as eligible patients who complete the baseline assessment, at least two NDURE intervention sessions, and the final follow-up assessment

  15. Navigation Session Completion [12 weeks]

    The number of NDURE navigation sessions completed by a participant

  16. Navigator Caseload [13 months]

    The number of simultaneous cases (on-trial participants) being navigated by the NDURE navigator

  17. Navigator Time Allocation (Direct) [12 weeks]

    The time (in minutes), that the NDURE navigator spends directly interacting with the patient to identify and address barriers to timely, equitable postoperative radiation therapy

  18. Navigator Time Allocation (Indirect) [12 weeks]

    The time (in minutes), that the navigator spends generating and enacting each Barrier Reduction Plan that is not directly interacting with the patient

  19. Satisfaction With the Interpersonal Relationship With the Navigator Scale Score [12 weeks]

    The PSN-I measures the satisfaction with the interpersonal relationship with the patient navigator. The PSN-I score is defined as the total score of this 9-item scale. The total score ranges from 9 (minimum) to 45 (maximum); higher scores represent a better outcome (greater satisfaction with the interpersonal relationship with the navigator).

  20. Satisfaction With Logistical Aspects of Navigation Scale Score [12 weeks]

    This 26-item scale measures the satisfaction of the logistical aspects of PN. The total score of the measure ranges from 0 (minimum) to 78 (maximum); higher scores represent a better outcome (greater satisfaction with the logistical aspects of navigation).

  21. Change in Care Transition Measure-15 (CTM-15) Score From Baseline to End-of-study [12 weeks]

    Care Transition Measure-15 (CTM-15) is a validated, psychometrically sound 15-item, unidimensional measure of care transitions across the healthcare system that is consistent with the concept of patient-centeredness and useful from an organization perspective for the purpose of performance measurement and quality improvement. Items are rated on a 4-point Likert scale from 'Strongly Disagree' (1) to 'Strongly Agree' (4). The CTM-15 score is calculated as the mean score (the summed score from each question divided by the total number of questions) with a linear transformation to 100. Scores range from 0-100; higher scores reflect more care integration and better care transitions.

  22. Change in Interpersonal Support Evaluation List-12 (ISEL-12) Score From Baseline to End-of-study [12 weeks]

    The ISEL-12 is a validated, 12-item assessment of three subscales (appraisal, belonging, and tangible) that has been used to assess support in prior PN studies. Items are rated on a 4-point Likert scale from 'Definitely False' (1) to 'Definitely True' (4). The total score is calculated by summing scores across all items (with reverse coding for items 1, 2, 7, 8, 11, 12). Scores range from 12-48. Higher scores indicate more support.

  23. Change in Perceived Susceptibility Questionnaire Score From Baseline to End-of-study [12 weeks]

    The Perceived Susceptibility Questionnaire is modified version of a validated 3-item perceived susceptibility subscale for mammography screening to assess perceived susceptibility for delays starting PORT after HNC surgery. Items are rated on a 5-point Likert scale. Scores range from 3-15 with higher scores indicating higher perceived susceptibility.

  24. Change in Illness Perception Questionnaire-Revised (IPQ-R) Consequences Subscale Score From Baseline to End-of-study [12 weeks]

    The IPQ-R consequences subscale is easily modifiable to asses disease-specific perceived severity. The IPQ-R is a validated assessment of a patient's self-representation of the health consequences of their illness. There are 6 Items; each is rated using a 5-point Likert scale from 'Strongly Disagree' (1) to 'Strongly Agree' (5). The score is calculated by summing across all items (with reverse coding for item 3). Scores range from 5 to 30. Higher scores indicate a greater degree of perceived severity of the illness.

  25. Change in Perceived Barriers Score From Baseline to End-of-study [12 weeks]

    The Perceived Barriers Questionnaire is a self-report measure of the presence/absence of pre-specified barriers to cancer care (yes/no). The questionnaire has been used extensively to assess perceived barriers in prior PN studies. Scores range from 0-29; higher scores reflect a greater number of barriers to care

Eligibility Criteria

Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study:
18 Years and Older
Sexes Eligible for Study:
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
No

In order to be eligible to participate in this study, an individual must meet all of the following criteria:

  1. Age > 18 years at the time of screening

  2. Histologically or pathologically confirmed invasive squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) (or histologic variant) of the oral cavity, oropharynx (p16 positive, negative, or unknown), hypopharynx, larynx, unknown primary, paranasal sinuses, or nasal cavity.

  3. American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) clinical stage grouping III-IV (8th edition) for patients with SCC of the oral cavity, p16-negative oropharynx, hypopharynx, larynx, paranasal sinuses, and nasal cavity; or AJCC clinical stage grouping III-IV (7th edition) for patients with p16-positive SCC of the oropharynx or unknown primary.

  4. No prior exposure to radiation therapy, with or without concurrent chemotherapy, for treatment of HNSCC in the definitive or adjuvant therapy settings

  5. Plan for curative intent surgery at MUSC

  6. Plan for PORT (at MUSC or non-MUSC) with or without concurrent chemotherapy following curative intent surgery

An individual who meets any of the following criteria will be excluded from participation in this study:

  1. Self-identified Hispanic ethnicity

  2. Presence of cognitive impairment that precludes participation as determined by oncology provider

  3. Prior radiation therapy for HNC

  4. Failure to undergo curative intent surgery at MUSC

  5. Lack of indication for PORT (with or without concurrent chemotherapy) per National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) Guidelines based on final pathologic evaluation of adverse features and AJCC pathologic stage grouping

Contacts and Locations

Locations

Site City State Country Postal Code
1 Medical University of South Carolina Charleston South Carolina United States 29425

Sponsors and Collaborators

  • Medical University of South Carolina

Investigators

  • Principal Investigator: Evan Graboyes, MD, Medical University of South Carolina

Study Documents (Full-Text)

More Information

Publications

Responsible Party:
Evan Graboyes, Assistant Professor, Department of Otolaryngology- Head and Neck Surgery, Medical University of South Carolina
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT03821064
Other Study ID Numbers:
  • Pro00077402
First Posted:
Jan 29, 2019
Last Update Posted:
Feb 1, 2021
Last Verified:
Jan 1, 2021
Individual Participant Data (IPD) Sharing Statement:
No
Plan to Share IPD:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product:
No
Keywords provided by Evan Graboyes, Assistant Professor, Department of Otolaryngology- Head and Neck Surgery, Medical University of South Carolina
Additional relevant MeSH terms:

Study Results

Participant Flow

Recruitment Details
Pre-assignment Detail
Arm/Group Title NDURE (Patient Navigation)
Arm/Group Description NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Period Title: Overall Study
STARTED 11
COMPLETED 10
NOT COMPLETED 1

Baseline Characteristics

Arm/Group Title NDURE (Patient Navigation)
Arm/Group Description NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Overall Participants 10
Age (years) [Median (Inter-Quartile Range) ]
Median (Inter-Quartile Range) [years]
58
Sex: Female, Male (Count of Participants)
Female
4
40%
Male
6
60%
Ethnicity (NIH/OMB) (Count of Participants)
Hispanic or Latino
0
0%
Not Hispanic or Latino
10
100%
Unknown or Not Reported
0
0%
Race (NIH/OMB) (Count of Participants)
American Indian or Alaska Native
0
0%
Asian
0
0%
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
0
0%
Black or African American
3
30%
White
7
70%
More than one race
0
0%
Unknown or Not Reported
0
0%
Region of Enrollment (participants) [Number]
United States
10
100%

Outcome Measures

1. Primary Outcome
Title Percent of Patients With a Delay Starting Post-Operative Radiation Treatment
Description Percent of patients who start PORT >6 weeks after surgery. Initiation of postoperative PORT > 6 weeks after surgery is defined as more than 42 calendar days from the time of the definitive surgical resection to the initiation of radiation therapy. In situations in which the surgical management of the primary tumor and the neck are staged (i.e. occur on two different calendar days), the date of the surgery for the primary tumor will be used. In situations in which an additional surgical resection is required (e.g. re-resection of positive margins to clear residual disease), the date of the earlier (i.e. attempted definitive) surgical procedure will be used to determine the target start date for PORT.
Time Frame 6 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 10
Count of Participants [Participants]
4
40%
2. Secondary Outcome
Title Percent Difference in PORT Delay Between White and AA HNC Patients.
Description The difference in the rate of initiation of PORT > 6 weeks after surgery between white and AA HNC patients (i.e., the difference in the percentage of white and AA participants who initiate PORT >6 weeks after surgery)
Time Frame 6 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 10
Number [percentage of participants]
9.6
96%
3. Secondary Outcome
Title Median Difference in Time-to-PORT, in Days, Between White and African American HNC Patients
Description Median difference in time-to-PORT, defined as the difference in number of days from surgery to initiation of PORT between white and AA HNC patients
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 10
Median (Standard Deviation) [days]
0
(17.9)
4. Secondary Outcome
Title Time-to-PORT
Description Days between surgery and the start of PORT is defined as the time, in days, between the date of definitive surgical resection to the initiation of radiation therapy. All of the criteria used to adjudicate the date of the definitive surgical procedure described for the primary outcome measure will be applied to this measure.
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 10
Median (95% Confidence Interval) [days]
42
5. Secondary Outcome
Title Percent of Patients With Pre-Surgical Radiation Consultation
Description Percent of patients with pre-surgical radiation consultation as defined as the attendance by the patient at a consultation with a radiation oncologist (at MUSC or elsewhere) prior to surgery to discuss RT in the definitive or adjuvant setting.
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 10
Count of Participants [Participants]
3
30%
6. Secondary Outcome
Title Percent of Patients With On-time Pre-Radiation Therapy Dental Extractions
Description Percent of patients with on-time dental extractions, defined as the extraction of teeth prior to discharge from the index hospitalization for the definitive surgical procedure. Patients who are edentulous are not evaluable for this measure.
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT- modified (the endpoint is only evaluable for dentate patients and 3 patients were edentulous and thus not evaluable for the endpoint)
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 7
Count of Participants [Participants]
6
60%
7. Secondary Outcome
Title Percent of Patients Surgery to Pathology Reports </= 7 Days
Description Surgery to Pathology Report </= 7 days is defined as the production of the pathology report from the definitive surgical procedure within the electronic medical record (EMR) within 7 calendar days of the definitive surgical procedure. Addenda to the pathology report at the request of the HNC team (e.g. tumor p16 status) are not counted in this measure.
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 10
Count of Participants [Participants]
8
80%
8. Secondary Outcome
Title Percent of Patients With Referral to PORT Within 10 Days of Surgery
Description Percent of patients with surgery to PORT referral </= 10 days, defined as the placement of a referral for PORT, at MUSC or elsewhere, within 10 calendar days of the definitive surgical procedure.
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 10
Count of Participants [Participants]
8
80%
9. Secondary Outcome
Title Percent of Patients With RT Consult Within 10 Days of RT Referral
Description Percent of patients with RT Referral to Consult </= 10 days, defined as the evaluation of the patient at a postoperative consultation with a radiation oncologist within 10 calendar days of the referral being placed (or postoperative appointment being scheduled in cases in which care has been established and the return visit is no longer a consultation). The consultation may occur in the clinic or the hospital depending upon clinical circumstances.
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 10
Count of Participants [Participants]
6
60%
10. Secondary Outcome
Title Percent of Patients With Initiation of RT Within 21 Days of Consultation
Description Percent of patients with RT Consult to Initiation </= 21 days, defined as the initiation of PORT within 21 calendar days of the patient being evaluated by a radiation oncologist for PORT.
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 10
Count of Participants [Participants]
3
30%
11. Secondary Outcome
Title Barriers Resolved
Description The number of barriers identified by the navigator that are resolved during the NDURE intervention, as determined by the navigator log.
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 10
Mean (Standard Deviation) [barriers]
2.4
(1.7)
12. Secondary Outcome
Title Change in Self-Efficacy in Cancer Care Score From Baseline to End-of-study
Description The Communication and Attitudinal Self-Efficacy Scale for Cancer-12 (CASE-cancer) measures self-efficacy within the context of productive communication and positive attitude for cancer patients. It is a psychometrically sound tool that may provide new information on important mediating factors of cancer care. The response scale ranges from 1 to 4 points (1= strongly disagree, 2=slightly disagree, 3=slightly agree, 4=strongly disagree). The twelve question scale is divided into 3 domains with 4 questions each. Scores from these subscales are added to compute a total score ranging from 12-48. Higher values represent a more positive attitude.
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT- 3 participants did not complete the questionnaire
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 7
Mean (Standard Deviation) [score on a scale]
-1.86
(14.79)
13. Secondary Outcome
Title Barriers Unresolved
Description The number of barriers identified by the navigator that are not resolved during the NDURE intervention, as determined by the navigator log.
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 10
Mean (Standard Deviation) [unresolved barriers]
0
(0)
14. Secondary Outcome
Title Percent of Eligible Participants Who Accrue to NDURE
Description Percent of eligible participants who accrue to NDURE, defined as a participant who meets all inclusion criteria and no exclusion criteria
Time Frame 13 months

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
eligible patients
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 13
Number [percentage of eligible participants]
84.6
846%
15. Secondary Outcome
Title Percentage of Enrolled Participants Who Complete NDURE
Description Percentage of enrolled participants who complete NDURE, defined as eligible patients who complete the baseline assessment, at least two NDURE intervention sessions, and the final follow-up assessment
Time Frame 13 months

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 10
Number [percentage of enrolled participants]
70
700%
16. Secondary Outcome
Title Navigation Session Completion
Description The number of NDURE navigation sessions completed by a participant
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 10
Mean (Standard Deviation) [NDURE sessions]
3
(0)
17. Secondary Outcome
Title Navigator Caseload
Description The number of simultaneous cases (on-trial participants) being navigated by the NDURE navigator
Time Frame 13 months

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 10
Mean (Full Range) [NDURE participants]
3
30%
18. Secondary Outcome
Title Navigator Time Allocation (Direct)
Description The time (in minutes), that the NDURE navigator spends directly interacting with the patient to identify and address barriers to timely, equitable postoperative radiation therapy
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 10
Mean (Full Range) [minutes]
100
19. Secondary Outcome
Title Navigator Time Allocation (Indirect)
Description The time (in minutes), that the navigator spends generating and enacting each Barrier Reduction Plan that is not directly interacting with the patient
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 10
Mean (Full Range) [minutes]
120
20. Secondary Outcome
Title Satisfaction With the Interpersonal Relationship With the Navigator Scale Score
Description The PSN-I measures the satisfaction with the interpersonal relationship with the patient navigator. The PSN-I score is defined as the total score of this 9-item scale. The total score ranges from 9 (minimum) to 45 (maximum); higher scores represent a better outcome (greater satisfaction with the interpersonal relationship with the navigator).
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT- two participants failed to return the end of study questionnaire
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 8
Mean (Standard Deviation) [units on a scale]
39.1
(8.7)
21. Secondary Outcome
Title Satisfaction With Logistical Aspects of Navigation Scale Score
Description This 26-item scale measures the satisfaction of the logistical aspects of PN. The total score of the measure ranges from 0 (minimum) to 78 (maximum); higher scores represent a better outcome (greater satisfaction with the logistical aspects of navigation).
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT- two participants failed to turn in end-of study questionnaires
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 8
Mean (Standard Deviation) [units on a scale]
43.1
(25.8)
22. Secondary Outcome
Title Change in Care Transition Measure-15 (CTM-15) Score From Baseline to End-of-study
Description Care Transition Measure-15 (CTM-15) is a validated, psychometrically sound 15-item, unidimensional measure of care transitions across the healthcare system that is consistent with the concept of patient-centeredness and useful from an organization perspective for the purpose of performance measurement and quality improvement. Items are rated on a 4-point Likert scale from 'Strongly Disagree' (1) to 'Strongly Agree' (4). The CTM-15 score is calculated as the mean score (the summed score from each question divided by the total number of questions) with a linear transformation to 100. Scores range from 0-100; higher scores reflect more care integration and better care transitions.
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT- 3 did not complete the questionnaire
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 7
Mean (Standard Deviation) [score on a scale]
39.5
(11.5)
23. Secondary Outcome
Title Change in Interpersonal Support Evaluation List-12 (ISEL-12) Score From Baseline to End-of-study
Description The ISEL-12 is a validated, 12-item assessment of three subscales (appraisal, belonging, and tangible) that has been used to assess support in prior PN studies. Items are rated on a 4-point Likert scale from 'Definitely False' (1) to 'Definitely True' (4). The total score is calculated by summing scores across all items (with reverse coding for items 1, 2, 7, 8, 11, 12). Scores range from 12-48. Higher scores indicate more support.
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT- 1 did not complete baseline questionnaire and 2 different participants did not complete end of study questionnaire leaving 7 evaluable paired pre-post data points
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 7
Mean (Standard Deviation) [score on a scale]
-0.14
(7.47)
24. Secondary Outcome
Title Change in Perceived Susceptibility Questionnaire Score From Baseline to End-of-study
Description The Perceived Susceptibility Questionnaire is modified version of a validated 3-item perceived susceptibility subscale for mammography screening to assess perceived susceptibility for delays starting PORT after HNC surgery. Items are rated on a 5-point Likert scale. Scores range from 3-15 with higher scores indicating higher perceived susceptibility.
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
4 participants did not complete a post questionnaire
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 6
Mean (Standard Deviation) [score on a scale]
-0.67
(1.03)
25. Secondary Outcome
Title Change in Illness Perception Questionnaire-Revised (IPQ-R) Consequences Subscale Score From Baseline to End-of-study
Description The IPQ-R consequences subscale is easily modifiable to asses disease-specific perceived severity. The IPQ-R is a validated assessment of a patient's self-representation of the health consequences of their illness. There are 6 Items; each is rated using a 5-point Likert scale from 'Strongly Disagree' (1) to 'Strongly Agree' (5). The score is calculated by summing across all items (with reverse coding for item 3). Scores range from 5 to 30. Higher scores indicate a greater degree of perceived severity of the illness.
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT- 3 participants did not complete the questionnaire
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 7
Mean (Standard Deviation) [score on a scale]
-0.17
(3.06)
26. Secondary Outcome
Title Change in Perceived Barriers Score From Baseline to End-of-study
Description The Perceived Barriers Questionnaire is a self-report measure of the presence/absence of pre-specified barriers to cancer care (yes/no). The questionnaire has been used extensively to assess perceived barriers in prior PN studies. Scores range from 0-29; higher scores reflect a greater number of barriers to care
Time Frame 12 weeks

Outcome Measure Data

Analysis Population Description
ITT- 3 did not complete post-treatment questionnaire
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
Measure Participants 7
Mean (Standard Deviation) [score on a scale]
2.2
(3.46)

Adverse Events

Time Frame from baseline to initiation of postoperative radiation therapy
Adverse Event Reporting Description the specific period of time is variable in this study, with end-of study defined as the initiation of postoperative radiation therapy (or 12 weeks if PORT is never started)
Arm/Group Title Patient Navigation
Arm/Group Description Patient Navigation: NDURE is a theory-based, multi-level patient navigation (PN) intervention consisting of clinic-based sessions of manualized PN to reduce barriers to care, increase HNC care delivery, and improve clinical outcomes (timely, equitable PORT). NDURE will be delivered from surgical consultation to PORT initiation (~3 months). The three in-person NDURE sessions, which are expected to take 30-60 minutes each, will coincide with the presurgical consult, hospital discharge, and 1st postoperative clinic visit. During the first session, the navigator will 1) elicit barriers and facilitators to timely PORT, 2) develop the personalized barrier reduction plan (BRP), review the BRP with the patient, caregiver, and provider, and 3) implement the BRP. At the two subsequent sessions, the navigator will review and update the BRP in an iterative, dynamic fashion, identifying new barriers and systematically tracking resolution of prior barriers until the start of PORT.
All Cause Mortality
Patient Navigation
Affected / at Risk (%) # Events
Total 0/10 (0%)
Serious Adverse Events
Patient Navigation
Affected / at Risk (%) # Events
Total 0/10 (0%)
Other (Not Including Serious) Adverse Events
Patient Navigation
Affected / at Risk (%) # Events
Total 0/10 (0%)

Limitations/Caveats

[Not Specified]

More Information

Certain Agreements

All Principal Investigators ARE employed by the organization sponsoring the study.

There is NOT an agreement between Principal Investigators and the Sponsor (or its agents) that restricts the PI's rights to discuss or publish trial results after the trial is completed.

Results Point of Contact

Name/Title Evan Graboyes (PI)
Organization Medical University of South Carolina
Phone 843-792-0719
Email graboyes@musc.edu
Responsible Party:
Evan Graboyes, Assistant Professor, Department of Otolaryngology- Head and Neck Surgery, Medical University of South Carolina
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT03821064
Other Study ID Numbers:
  • Pro00077402
First Posted:
Jan 29, 2019
Last Update Posted:
Feb 1, 2021
Last Verified:
Jan 1, 2021