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Telephone-based Care Management Program
Helps Cancer Patients with pain, depression
Newswise, July 2010 —
Cancer patients
receiving care in geographically dispersed
urban and rural oncology practices who
participated in a program that included
telephone-based care management and
home-based automated symptom monitoring had
greater improvement in pain and depression
compared to patients who received usual
care, according to a study in the July 14
issue of JAMA.
Pain and depression are the most common
physical and psychological symptoms in
cancer patients. “However, despite their
prevalence and associated disability,
cancer-related pain and depression are
frequently undetected and undertreated,”
according to background information in the
article.
Kurt Kroenke, M.D., of the Richard Roudebush
VA Medical Center, Indiana University, and
Regenstrief Institute, Indianapolis, and
colleagues conducted the Indiana Cancer Pain
and Depression (INCPAD) trial in 16
community-based urban and rural
geographically dispersed oncology practices,
as a collaborative care approach to managing
depression and pain. Patients entered the
trial from March 2006 through August 2008,
with follow-up concluding in August 2009.
Participating
patients had depression, cancer-related
pain, or both, and were randomly assigned to
receive the intervention (n = 202) or
receive usual care (n = 203), and were
stratified by symptom type.
Patients in the intervention group received
centralized telecare management by a
nurse-physician specialist team coupled with
automated home-based symptom monitoring by
interactive voice recording or Internet.
Telephonic care management was delivered by
a nurse care manager trained in assessing
symptom response and medication adherence;
in providing pain and depression-specific
education; and in making treatment
adjustments according to evidence-based
guidelines. Depression and pain symptoms
were assessed at the beginning of the trial
and at months 1,3,6, and 12.
Of the 405 participants enrolled in the
study, 131 had depression only, 96 had pain
only, and 178 had both depression and pain.
The researchers found that of the 274
patients with pain, 137 patients in the
intervention group had greater improvements
in pain severity as assessed by the Brief
Pain Inventory (BPI; 30 percent or greater
decrease in BPI) over the 12 months of the
trial than the 137 patients in the
usual-care group.
Of the 309 patients with depression, the 154
patients in the intervention group had
significantly greater improvement in
depression severity as assessed by the
Hopkins Symptom Checklist (HSCL; 50 percent
or greater decrease in HSCL) than the 155
patients in the usual-care group.
Between-group differences in secondary
outcomes that were not pain- or
depression-specific were also assessed, and
the intervention group had better outcomes
for several health-related quality of life
domains, including mental health, vitality,
anxiety, and physical symptom burden.
“Our INCPAD trial has several important
findings.
First, the telecare management intervention
resulted in significant improvements in both
pain and depression.
Second,
the trial demonstrated that it is feasible
to provide telephone-based centralized
symptom management across multiple
geographically dispersed community-based
practices in both urban and rural areas by
coupling human with technology-augmented
patient interactions.
Third, the findings did not appear to be
confounded by differential rates of
co-interventions or health care use,” the
authors write.
“The fact that INCPAD was beneficial for the
most common physical and psychological
symptoms in cancer patients demonstrates
that a collaborative care intervention can
cover several conditions, both physical and
psychological.”