Psychological mobile app for patients with acute myeloid leukemia: A pilot randomized clinical trial

Author:

El‐Jawahri Areej12ORCID,Luskin Marlise R.23,Greer Joseph A.12ORCID,Traeger Lara12,Lavoie Mitchell1,Vaughn Dagny Marie1ORCID,Andrews Stephanie3,Yang Daniel1,Boateng Kofi Y.1,Newcomb Richard A.12,Ufere Nneka N.24,Fathi Amir T.12ORCID,Hobbs Gabriela12,Brunner Andrew12,Abel Gregory A.23,Stone Richard M.23,DeAngelo Daniel J.23,Wadleigh Martha23,Temel Jennifer S.12

Affiliation:

1. Divsion of Hematology Oncology Massachusetts General Hospital Boston Massachusetts USA

2. Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA

3. Department of Medical Oncology Dana‐Farber Cancer Institute Boston Massachusetts USA

4. Department of Medicine Massachusetts General Hospital Boston Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPatients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) experience a substantial decline in quality of life (QoL) and mood during their hospitalization for intensive chemotherapy, yet few interventions have been developed to enhance patient‐reported outcomes during treatment.MethodsWe conducted a pilot randomized trial (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT03372291) of DREAMLAND, a psychological mobile application for patients with a new diagnosis of AML who are receiving intensive chemotherapy. Patients were randomly assigned to DREAMLAND or usual care. DREAMLAND included four required modules focused on: (1) supportive psychotherapy to help patients deal with the initial shock of diagnosis, (2) psychoeducation to manage illness expectations, (3) psychosocial skill‐building to promote effective coping, and (4) self‐care. The primary end point was feasibility, which was defined as ≥60% of eligible patients enrolling and 60% of those enrolled completing ≥60% of the required modules. We assessed patient QoL (the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy–Leukemia), psychological distress (the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale and the Patient Health Questionnaire‐9), symptom burden (the Edmonton Symptom Assessment Scale), and self‐efficacy (the Cancer Self‐Efficacy Scale) at baseline and at day 20 after postchemotherapy.ResultsWe enrolled 60 of 90 eligible patients (66.7%), and 62.1% completed ≥75% of the intervention modules. At day 20 after chemotherapy, patients who were randomized to DREAMLAND reported improved QoL scores (132.06 vs. 110.72; p =.001), lower anxiety symptoms (3.54 vs. 5.64; p = .010) and depression symptoms (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale: 4.76 vs. 6.29; p = .121; Patient Health Questionnaire‐9: 4.62 vs. 8.35; p < .001), and improved symptom burden (24.89 vs. 40.60; p = .007) and self‐efficacy (151.84 vs. 135.43; p = .004) compared with the usual care group.ConclusionsA psychological mobile application for patients with newly diagnosed AML is feasible to integrate during hospitalization for intensive chemotherapy and may improve QoL, mood, symptom burden, and self‐efficacy.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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