The following info and data is provided "as is" to help patients around the globe.
We do not endorse or review these studies in any way.
Brief Title: Rehabilitation Including Social Activity and Education in Children and Teenagers With Cancer
Official Title: Rehabilitation Including Social Activity and Education in Children and Teenagers With Cancer
Study ID: NCT01772849
Brief Summary: The purpose of this study is to determine whether early rehabilitation intervention including educational and social activities with a class mate at two weeks intervals at the ped.onc. center will increase children with cancer's level of education performance.
Detailed Description: Background In Denmark 200 children under the age of 18 are diagnosed annually with cancer and the prevalence of patients undergoing anticancer therapy is 300. The expected five-year survival rate is 80%, but since the treatment is intensive with a high risk of life-threatening infections, these patients are frequently isolated at home or in hospital during their 1-2 years of therapy, which means reduced contact with their normal school environment, leisure activities and friends. Long-term survivors of childhood cancer frequently have compromised age-appropriate social relationships and psychosocial development, difficulties with resuming physical activities, and poor self-esteem leading to reduced quality of life. Intervention studies designed to improve physical and social function during treatment of children with cancer are lacking. Aim To develop an interactive rehabilitation programme that a) preserve the educational, physical and psychosocial life of the patients or even obtains "growth with cancer", b) maintains the child's everyday life (e.g. normal social relationships), and c) improves long-term physical performance, social competences, higher grade educational enrollment, and later integration into the labour market. Theoretical basis This project is inspired by Erving Goffman's interactional theory on normality and related concepts of stigma and frame analysis as well as Thomas Scheff's theory on the concept of emotional and social bonds and the development of the sociology of emotions. Material and methods Intervention group: Children aged 6.0-18.0 years diagnosed with cancer 2013-2015 at Rigshospitalet (covers eastern part of Denmark (approximately 50% of total population)). Control group: The primary control group is children with cancer treated at the university hospitals in Odense, Aarhus and Aalborg 2013-2015. In addition, outcome data for cases will be compared with three other (secondary) comparative groups: a) children with cancer treated at any Danish childhood oncology unit throughout Denmark in 2012 (historical controls); b) the sibling closest in age to the intervention group patients (family matched); and c) the intervention group patient's classmates. Questionnaires: PedsQL, Strength and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ), Revised Child anxiety and Depression Scale, Resilience, Loneliness and Social Dissatisfaction Questionnaire og The Children´s Impact of Event Scale 13 Qualitative interviews: Qualitative interviews are performed with children with cancer, their parents, and the ambassadors. The focus will be on sociometric status, social independence and competences, self-esteem, fatigue, physical activity, educational outcome, and safety issues as well as an evaluation of the intervention program. Outcomes and statistical considerations Provided all children with cancer (6-18 years) are included in the intervention or control group this study will be national cohort study including approximately 120 intervention children and 120 control children during the three year intervention period. If the children´s academic performance are divided into five categories (unsatisfactory to outstanding level of performance) with a distribution of performance on the five categories as 10 %; 20 %; 40 %; 20 %; 10 % and where a change from one category to another are regarded as a significant change in the child´s academic performance, it is possible to achieve a strength over 0.90 to detect a change of the average by 0.5 if 120 children are included.
Minimum Age: 6 Years
Eligible Ages: CHILD, ADULT
Sex: ALL
Healthy Volunteers: No
Kjeld Schmiegelow, Copenhagen, , Denmark
Kjeld Schmiegelow, Copenhagen, , Denmark
Name: Kjeld Schmiegelow, M.D
Affiliation: University Hospital of Copenhagen, Rigshospitalet
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR