Massachusetts General Hospital
Jennifer Temel, MD
Dyspnea, or breathlessness, is one of the most common and distressing symptoms experienced by patients with advanced lung cancer. The purpose of this multi-site trial is to test the effectiveness of a dyspnea intervention (called BREEZE+) that includes three brief nurse-delivered sessions and access to a digital health app that teaches and reinforces patients' use of skills for managing and coping with this highly debilitating symptom. This study will lay the groundwork for a follow-up pragmatic implementation trial integrating BREEZE+ into usual oncology care for patients with advanced lung cancer experiencing dyspnea.
Advanced Lung Cancer
Dyspnea
Dyspnea Intervention
Enhanced Usual Care
NA
The goal of this study is to improve dyspnea, one of the most common and debilitating symptoms experienced by patients with advanced lung cancer. Despite improvements in survival from novel targeted therapy and immunotherapy for patients with advanced lung cancer, the proportion of patients experiencing dyspnea (i.e., difficulty breathing) has not decreased. In fact, recent data show that the prevalence of dyspnea is now over 70%, higher than estimates reported in older cohorts. Although cancer burden, such as extensive disease in the lung or pleural effusions, certainly causes and exacerbates symptoms of breathlessness, psychological factors also underlie the experience of dyspnea. Patient-reported dyspnea is associated with impaired quality of life, decreased functioning at home and work, withdrawal from social activities, heightened symptoms of anxiety and depression, and even a desire for hastened death. Moreover, dyspnea leads to unscheduled visits to oncology clinics and the emergency department, often resulting in hospitalization. Recognizing the notable impact of breathlessness on patient functioning and health care utilization, the Quality Oncology Practice Initiative for the American Society of Clinical Oncology identified the assessment and management of dyspnea as a key measure of quality cancer care. Unfortunately, data are limited to support efficacious treatments for dyspnea. While clinicians commonly prescribe opioids to treat breathlessness, recent systematic reviews concluded that pharmacologic management did not improve dyspnea and carried potential harm. In a recent Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Comparative Effectiveness Review of non-pharmacological interventions for dyspnea, the authors reported that behavioral and multicomponent interventions involving physical activity or rehabilitation hold the greatest promise for addressing dyspnea, despite having low strength of evidence to date. Therefore, comprehensive approaches to care incorporating behavioral interventions for dyspnea are greatly needed, given the degree of patient suffering and the lack of evidence-based protocols. To address this evidence gap, the investigators developed a brief, two-session behavioral intervention for dyspnea management in patients with advanced lung cancer called, "BREEZE." To ensure the potential for broad dissemination of BREEZE, the investigators purposefully limited the number of sessions, trained oncology nurses to serve as interventionists, and successfully transitioned to fully remote delivery during the pandemic. The investigators completed a single-center randomized controlled efficacy trial of BREEZE versus usual care in patients with advanced lung cancer and self-reported dyspnea. Patients assigned to BREEZE reported significant improvements in the primary outcome of self-reported dyspnea and functional wellbeing at week eight. However, intervention effects were not sustained by the six-month follow-up time point. The investigators now propose to build upon these encouraging findings by conducting a multi-site trial of BREEZE in a diverse patient population. Moreover, the investigators have enhanced the intervention by adding a nurse-led booster session and integrating the dyspnea management components from a digital health app that their team developed for patients with advanced lung cancer, to reinforce BREEZE's evidence-based skills and to sustain intervention effects while preserving the "low-touch" for dissemination. The investigators propose to conduct a multi-site type I hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial of BREEZE plus the booster and digital health app (i.e., BREEZE+) versus an enhanced usual care control (entailing educational resources on dyspnea management) in 420 patients with advanced lung cancer reporting dyspnea. Massachusetts General Hospital, Johns Hopkins University, and the University of Miami will serve as study sites. The nurse-led sessions and digital health app components will be available in Spanish and English to enable the recruitment of a diverse sample, and the investigators will centralize intervention delivery to facilitate implementation. Data from this study will ultimately serve as the basis for a follow-up large-scale, multi-site dissemination trial of BREEZE+.
Study Type : | INTERVENTIONAL |
Estimated Enrollment : | 420 participants |
Masking : | DOUBLE |
Primary Purpose : | SUPPORTIVE_CARE |
Official Title : | Multi-site Trial of a Brief Behavioral Intervention for Dyspnea in Patients With Advanced Lung Cancer |
Actual Study Start Date : | 2025-07-01 |
Estimated Primary Completion Date : | 2029-12-31 |
Estimated Study Completion Date : | 2030-03-31 |
Information not available for Arms and Intervention/treatment
Ages Eligible for Study: | 18 Years |
Sexes Eligible for Study: | ALL |
Accepts Healthy Volunteers: |
Want to participate in this study, select a site at your convenience, send yourself email to get contact details and prescreening steps.
Not yet recruiting
University of Miami
Coral Gables, Florida, United States, 33124
Not yet recruiting
Johns Hopkins University
Baltimore, Maryland, United States, 21224
Not yet recruiting
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States, 02114