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Study Protocol for the Social Interventions for Support During Treatment for Endometrial Cancer and Recurrence (SISTER) study: a community engaged national randomized trial

Authors :
Ann Oluloro
Bryan Comstock
Sarah E Monsell
Maya Gross
Erika M Wolff
Liz Sage
Julianna Alson
Danielle C Lavallee
Bridgette Hempstead
Adrienne Moor
Ronit Katz
Kemi M Doll
Source :
Journal of Comparative Effectiveness Research, Vol 13, Iss 3 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Becaris Publishing Limited, 2024.

Abstract

Aim: Social isolation in cancer patients is correlated with prognosis and is a potential mediator of treatment completion. Black women with endometrial cancer (EC) are at increased risk for social isolation when compared with White patients. We developed the Social Interventions for Support during Treatment for Endometrial Cancer and Recurrence (SISTER) study to compare and evaluate interventions to address social isolation among Black women with high-risk EC in USA. The primary objective of the SISTER study is to determine whether virtual support interventions improve treatment completion compared with Enhanced Usual Care. Secondary objectives include comparing effectiveness virtual evidence-based interventions and evaluating barriers and facilitators to social support delivery. Patients & methods: This is a multi-site prospective, open-label, community-engaged randomized controlled trial, consisting of three intervention arms: enhanced usual care, facilitated support group and one-to-one peer support. Primary outcome will be measured using relative dose. Qualitative semi-structured interviews will be conducted with a subset of participants to contextualize the relative degree or lack thereof of social isolation, over time. Data analysis: Primary analysis will be based on an intent-to-treat analysis. Multivariable analysis will be performed to determine the effect of the intervention on the primary and secondary outcomes of interest, relative dose and social isolation score. Semi-structured interviews will be qualitatively analyzed using inductive and deductive approaches of content analysis. Discussion/conclusion: Endometrial cancer mortality disproportionately affects Black women, and social isolation contributes to this disparity. The SISTER study aims to identify whether and to what extent differing social support vehicles improve key outcomes for Black women in the United States with high-risk EC.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20426313
Volume :
13
Issue :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Comparative Effectiveness Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.627c47e22c324bba858474a4109439ac
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.57264/cer-2023-0159