33 Background: Patients with advanced cancer are frequently hospitalized and experience burdensome transitions of care after discharge. Interventions to address patients’ symptoms, support medication management, and ensure continuity of care after discharge are lacking. We sought to demonstrate the feasibility and acceptability of CONTINUUM (CONTINUity of care Under Management by video visits) for this population. Methods: We conducted a single-arm pilot trial (n = 50) of CONTINUUM at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH). The intervention consisted of a video visit with an oncology nurse practitioner (NP) within 3 business days of hospital discharge to address symptoms, medication management, hospitalization-related issues, and care coordination. Prior to discharge, we enrolled English-speaking adults with advanced breast, gastrointestinal, genitourinary, or thoracic cancers experiencing an unplanned hospitalization who were receiving ongoing oncology care at MGH and being discharged home without hospice services. We defined the intervention as feasible if ≥70% of approached and eligible patients enrolled and if ≥70% of enrolled patients completed the intervention within 3 business days of discharge. At 2 weeks after discharge, patients rated the ease of use of the video technology and stated whether they would recommend the intervention. NPs completed post-intervention surveys to assess fidelity to the intervention protocol. Results: From 01/07/21 to 05/28/21, we enrolled 50 patients (75% of patients approached). Of the enrolled patients (median age = 65 years; 62% and 22% had advanced gastrointestinal or thoracic cancers, respectively), 78% of enrolled patients received the intervention within 3 business days of discharge. Patient rating of the ease of use of video technology was a mean of 7.6 out of 10, with 72% stating they “agreed” or “strongly agreed” that they would recommend the intervention. NP post-intervention surveys revealed that visits primarily focused on symptom management (56%), followed by addressing post-hospital care issues (21%). Of the 30 patients with 30-day follow-up, 43% were readmitted within 30 days of discharge, and 17% died within 30 days of discharge. Conclusions: We found that CONTINUUM, which consists of an NP-delivered video visit soon after hospital discharge addressing patients’ symptoms, medications, and care coordination, represents a feasible and acceptable approach to provide post-discharge care for hospitalized patients with advanced cancer. Future studies will test the efficacy of the intervention for reducing hospital readmissions. Clinical trial information: NCT04640714.
1534 Background: Patients with advanced cancer are frequently hospitalized and experience burdensome transitions of care after discharge. Interventions to address patients’ symptoms, support medication management, and ensure continuity of care after discharge are lacking. We sought to demonstrate the feasibility and acceptability of CONTINUUM (CONTINUity of care Under Management by video visits) for this population. Methods: We conducted a single-arm pilot trial (n = 54) of CONTINUUM at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH). The intervention consisted of a video visit with an oncology nurse practitioner (NP) within 3 business days of hospital discharge to address symptoms, medication management, hospitalization-related issues, and care coordination. Prior to discharge, we enrolled English-speaking adults with advanced breast, gastrointestinal, genitourinary, or thoracic cancers experiencing an unplanned hospitalization who were receiving ongoing oncology care at MGH and being discharged home without hospice services. We defined the intervention as feasible if ≥70% of approached and eligible patients enrolled and if ≥70% of enrolled patients completed the intervention within 3 business days of discharge. At 2 weeks after discharge, patients rated the ease of use of the video technology and stated whether they would recommend the intervention. NPs completed post-intervention surveys to assess fidelity to the intervention protocol. Results: From 01/07/21 to 05/28/21, we enrolled 54 patients (77.3% of patients approached). Of the enrolled patients (median age = 65.0 years; 59.3% and 22.2% had advanced gastrointestinal or thoracic cancers, respectively), 83.3% of enrolled patients received the intervention within 3 business days of discharge. Patient rating of the ease of use of video technology was a mean of 7.8 out of 10, with 71.4% stating they “agreed” or “strongly agreed” that they would recommend the intervention. NP post-intervention surveys revealed that visits focused on symptom management (85.7%), followed by addressing post-hospital care issues (69.0%). At 30 day follow up, 38.8% were readmitted within 30 days of discharge, and 12.2% died within 30 days of discharge. Conclusions: We found that CONTINUUM, which consists of an NP-delivered video visit soon after hospital discharge addressing patients’ symptoms, medications, and care coordination, represents a feasible and acceptable approach to provide post-discharge care for hospitalized patients with advanced cancer. Future studies will test the efficacy of the intervention for reducing hospital readmissions. Clinical trial information: NCT04640714.
295 Background: Patients with advanced cancer often experience frequent and prolonged hospitalizations, and the transition from hospital to home represents a critical period for these individuals, as they prefer to maximize time at home and avoid readmissions. We sought to demonstrate the feasibility and acceptability of a Supportive Oncology Care at Home intervention to address the post-discharge needs of recently hospitalized patients with advanced cancer. Methods: We conducted a single-arm pilot trial at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH). We enrolled English-speaking adults with advanced solid tumors experiencing their second or later unplanned hospitalization, who were being discharged home without hospice services and residing within a 50 mile radius of MGH. The three-week intervention consisted of: 1) hospital in the home care model for proactive symptom assessment and management, including clinician visits to assess patients, draw labs, administer intravenous medications and hydration, and ensure optimal symptom management; 2) remote monitoring of daily patient-reported symptoms, vital signs, and body weight; and 3) structured communication with the oncology team. The primary endpoint of the study was feasibility, defined as ≥60% of approached and eligible patients enrolling and ≥60% of participants completing daily symptom assessments. After intervention completion, patients rated the helpfulness and convenience of the intervention and symptom monitoring technology. Results: From 12/2021-6/2022, we enrolled 40 out of 66 approached patients (60.6% enrollment rate). Enrolled patients (median age = 58.5 years, 50% female, 75% white, 68% married, 50% gastrointestinal cancers) completed 93.8% of daily symptom assessments. 12 patients (30%) did not complete the intervention due to withdrawal (5), hospice transfer (4), or death (3). Among enrolled patients, 20.0% were enrolled in hospice and 15.4% died at 30 days after hospital discharge. In exit interviews, 100% and 75% rated the intervention and symptom monitoring as helpful, respectively. 83% of patients found the in-home monitoring technology convenient. Conclusions: We found that a three-week Supportive Oncology Care at Home intervention is a feasible approach to providing post-discharge care for high acuity, seriously ill hospitalized patients with advanced cancer. These patients also found the intervention highly acceptable. Future studies will test the efficacy of the intervention for reducing hospital readmissions, improving symptom management and quality of life, and increasing days spent at home near the end of life. Clinical trial information: NCT04637035.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.