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Brief Title: Evaluation of a Web-based Decision Aid Tool for Prostate Cancer Patients
Official Title: Evaluating a Decision Aid in Clinical Practice for Patients With Localized Prostate Cancer
Study ID: NCT03278197
Brief Summary: Patients diagnosed with localized prostate cancer may be eligible for different treatment options. MAASTRO Clinic (MAAStricht Radiation Oncology) developed a web-based decision aid tool for these patients. The goal of the tool is to help patients to understand the treatments, and empower the patients to participate in the decision making process. The aim of this study is threefold: (A) user-testing and validation of the tool, by using a systematically development process compliant with the IPDAS (International Patients Decision Aids Standards) criteria (B) establish the impact of the tool on the decision making process; (C) identify barriers and facilitators for the implementation of shared decision making and the tool in clinical practice. The study covers 3 phases: 1. Development phase 1.1 Assess decisional needs of patients and clinicians. 1.2 Test patients' and clinicians' comprehensibility, acceptability and usability on the alpha-version of the tool. 1.3 Value clarification: Delphi study with former prostate cancer patients to determine the most important patient preferences and value clarification aspects the decision aid should include. 2. Implementation phase: Develop an implementation and dissemination plan for shared decision-making which is based on the evaluation of barriers and facilitators for the use of patient decision aid tools in clinical practice. 3. Evaluation phase: Establish the impact of on knowledge, decisional conflict and the shared decision-making process, as well as the extent to which clinicians involve patients in decision-making. A mixed method will be used. It comprises structured interviews combined with think aloud and questionnaires with stakeholders involved in the whole process of development, implementation and evaluation (patients, urologists, radiotherapists, nurses, general practitioners, patient organizations, and insurance companies).
Detailed Description: Prostate cancer is the most common malignancy observed among men in industrialized countries, with 1.11 million new cases diagnosed in 2012 . For patients with localized prostate cancer, different treatment options are available; radical prostatectomy, external beam radiotherapy, interstitial radiotherapy also called Brachytherapy (early-stage disease), and 'active surveillance' (low risk patients). The optimal treatment for patients having localized prostate cancer is not unambiguously proven. Different treatment options cause different side effects that may impact the patients' health-related quality of life. The treatment of choice depends on preferences and personal values. In these preference-sensitive choices it is important to involve the patient in the decision-making process. In this process both the practitioner and the patient exchange information and collaborate in the decision, the physician knows more technical information about the disease, the treatment options and the side effects, the patient knows how the treatment options correspond with his lifestyle, values and preferences. Patient Decision Aids (PDAs) are tools that can help patients to get involved in decision making by clarifying treatment options, outcomes, and personal values. In the development process of a decision aid it is mandatory to follow a systematic and iterative approach to: (a) understand patient's decisional needs; (b) create prototypical tools; (c) evaluate these prototypes with patients and clinicians, and (d) use these results to improve the tool. Considering the International Patient Decision Aid Standards (http://ipdas.ohri.ca/), the investigators designed an initial prototype, called Treatmentchoice (http://www.treatmentchoice.info). These standards recommend assessing patients and doctors views in decisional needs, use this information to develop an alpha version of the PDA and validate the Treatmentchoice again with patients and doctors to create a beta version. The aim of this project is user-testing the initial prototype of the Treatmentchoice. This will allow the investigators to follow a systematic development process and to gain knowledge on the validity of approach of the investigators. The project covers 4 activities: ACTIVITY 1.1: ASSESS DECISIONAL NEEDS: Elicit patients' and clinicians' views on patient's information, expectations, and needs on decision support. Conclusions and recommendations for improvement of Treatmentchoice will be derived and the current prototype will be improved creating an alpha prototype. ACTIVITY 1.2: ALPHA-TESTING: Testing patients' and clinicians' comprehensibility, acceptability and usability on the alpha prototype. A mixed method will be used; structured interviews combined with think aloud (Ahmed, 2009) and questionnaires (Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT) - Venkatesh et al.) with both patients and clinicians (urologists, radiotherapists and general practitioners). Conclusions and recommendations will be documented. Considering this assessment, the prototype will be improved. Alpha testing will be repeated with this improved prototype using an iterative process, until the tool is comprehensible, acceptable and usable for both patients and physicians. ACTIVITY 1.3: DELPHI STUDY: Gain an in-depth understanding of the information needs of prostate cancer patients at each stage from diagnosis to treatment and post-treatment. The purpose is to improve the contents of the decision aid so that it contains an accurate representation of the factors that are most relevant to prostate cancer patients. First, focus group interviews with former prostate cancer patients and patient organizations will be carried out. The results will be analyzed and a list of factors will be generated. A Delphi consensus process will be used to rank the relative importance of these factors and the tool will be updated to give information that is most important for patients. ACTIVITY 2: IMPACT STUDY (or beta testing): Evaluation of the impact of Treatmentchoice on knowledge, decisional conflict and the shared decision making process, as well as the extent to which clinicians involve patients in decision making. A variety of questionnaires will be used to assess different outcome measures: * Age and educational level, home internet connection, and computer skills * Knowledge test will be assessed using 20 statements, which can be rated as "true", "false" or "do not know" . * Decisional conflict will be assessed using the Decisional Conflict Scale (DCS). This 16-item scale has five subscales: feeling informed, decisional uncertainty, clear values, support, and quality of decisions. Each of these items is scored on a five-point Likert scale from 1 (strongly agree) to 5 (strongly disagree). * Patient's desire to participate in medical decisions will be assessed using a 5-item Control Preference Scale. * The Shared Decision Making (SDM) process will be assessed by the perceptions of patients, using the SDM-Q9 instrument for patients. The instrument provides 9 statements, which can be rated on a six-point scale from 0 (completely disagree) to 5 (completely agree). (SDM-Q9, Rodenburg, 2015 /Dutch version). * The process of SDM will also be assessed by the perceptions of the physician (the urologist or the RTO if the decision is made together with an RTO), using the SDM-Q9 instrument for professionals. The instrument provides 9 statements, also rated on a six-point scale. The patients will be asked to fill in the questionnaires at two time points: directly after the decision making process and 3 months after the decision making process. Their physician will be asked to fill in the questionnaire at one-time point, directly after the decision making process. ACTIVITY 3: IMPLEMENTATION: Identify key aspects on the implementation and dissemination for shared decision-making in prostate cancer. Semi-structured interviews will be performed to recognize barriers and facilitators for implementation in clinical practice, to develop strategies for the implementation of decision aids and to facilitate optimal shared decision-making which is tailored to the needs of the end-users (patients and doctors).
Minimum Age: 18 Years
Eligible Ages: ADULT, OLDER_ADULT
Sex: MALE
Healthy Volunteers: Yes
Maastro Clinic, Maastricht, , Netherlands
Name: Philippe Lambin, MD,PhD
Affiliation: Maastro Clinic, The Netherlands
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR