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SWOG S1820: Altering Intake, Managing Symptoms for bowel dysfunction in survivors of Rectal Cancer (The AIMS-RC intervention trial)

Authors :
Lee Jones
Mazin Al-Kasspooles
Virginia Sun
Kathryn B. Arnold
Robert S. Krouse
Stacey A. Cohen
Cynthia A. Thomson
Sarah J. Freylersythe
Tracy E. Crane
Katherine A. Guthrie
Christa Braun-Inglis
Source :
Contemporary Clinical Trials Communications, Vol 22, Iss, Pp 100768-(2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Objective To describe the study protocol of SWOG S1820, a trial of the Altering Intake, Managing Symptoms intervention for bowel dysfunction in survivors of R ectal C ancer (AIMS-RC). Design SWOG S1820 is a multi-site, randomized trial of 94 post-treatment survivors of rectal cancer, comparing the intervention and attention control arms. Setting Affiliated institutions of the National Cancer Institute (NCI)-supported National Community Oncology Research Program (NCORP) and the National Clinical Trial Network (NCTN). Participants Survivors of rectal cancer who are between 6 and 24 months after treatment completion. Intervention AIMS-RC is a 17-week, 10 session telephone coaching program to help survivors of rectal cancer track their symptoms and improve their diets for better health and bowel function. It includes telephone-based coaching, resource manual, and personalized text/email messaging for motivation in between the telephone sessions. Main outcome measures Bowel function, low anterior resection syndrome score, quality of life (QOL), dietary quality, motivation, self-efficacy, positive/negative affect, feasibility, adherence, retention, acceptability. Analysis Thirty-seven participants per arm (74 total) provide 80% power to detect this 0.5 standard deviation effect size, based on a two-sample t-test with a 1-sided alpha = 0.1. A total of 94 randomized participants will be accrued to account for 7% ineligibility and 15% attrition at 6 months.

Details

ISSN :
24518654
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Contemporary Clinical Trials Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bf9e526638b6d8bb56e1bb21ace38a24
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.conctc.2021.100768