Precision lung cancer survivorship care: Accrual to the Kentucky LEADS Collaborative Lung Cancer Survivorship Care Program.

Authors

Jamie Studts

Jamie L Studts

University of Kentucky Markey Cancer Center, Lexington, KY

Organizations

University of Kentucky Markey Cancer Center, Lexington, KY

Research Funding

Other Foundation
Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation
Background: Recent innovations in lung cancer care create an urgent need to generate survivorship care interventions that target lung cancer survivors and tailor content and services to this unique community. In addition to suffering significant distress and symptom burden, individuals diagnosed with lung cancer suffer the additional burden of stigma and bias and may not receive optimal social support. The Kentucky LEADS Collaborative Lung Cancer Survivorship Care Program adopts a precision survivorship approach by combining shared decision making and motivational interviewing to address specific threats to quality of life experienced by an individual facing lung cancer.

Methods: A single-arm trial was conducted at nine cancer care facilities across Kentucky to assess intervention feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy. Eligible participants included individuals diagnosed with lung cancer who did not evince acute psychiatric or substance abuse issues. Upon consent, participants completed a baseline survey (T1) and medical data was extracted from the electronic record. Participants also completed the survey following intervention completion (T2) and six months post-baseline (T3). Analyses evaluate accrual and completion rates as well as participant demographics.

Results: Over an approximately 12-month accrual period, nine sites accrued 142 participants. Three sites exceeded the accrual goal of 20. Of the participants accrued, 138 (97%) completed T1, 84 (58%) completed T2, 74 (52%) completed T3, and 70 (49%) provided complete data. The majority of participants were female (64%), the mean age was 63.4 (9.3) years, and nearly all participants were white/non-Hispanic (96%). Most participants had a high school degree or less (52%), described household incomes of $35K or less, but nearly all reported carrying health insurance (98%).

Conclusions: The Kentucky LEADS program offers an intriguing approach to engaging lung cancer survivors by incorporating precision care strategies that may circumvent some of the more common challenges to reaching individuals diagnosed with lung cancer.

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Abstract Details

Meeting

2019 Supportive Care in Oncology Symposium

Session Type

Poster Session

Session Title

Poster Session B

Track

Mental Health and Psychological Well-being,Psychosocial and Spiritual/Cultural Assessment and Management,Models of Care,Patient Reported Outcomes and Patient Experience,Prevention, Assessment, and Management of Disease and Treatment-related Symptoms,Prognostication ,Survivorship and Late Effects of Cancer

Sub Track

Survivorship and Late Effects of Cancer

Clinical Trial Registration Number

NCT02989974

Citation

J Clin Oncol 37, 2019 (suppl 31; abstr 144)

DOI

10.1200/JCO.2019.37.31_suppl.144

Abstract #

144

Poster Bd #

F6

Abstract Disclosures

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