Abstract

e24148 Background: Patient (pt) education materials regarding self-management of cytotoxic chemotherapy related side effects are lacking at Penn State Cancer Institute (PSCI), resulting in patients using disreputable sources. We created a brochure that educates patients on common side effects, tools to address the problems themselves, information on when to contact their oncologist, and guidance on when to visit the ED. The aim of our pilot study is to evaluate the feasibility at PSCI and subsequently improve pt related outcomes and quality of life through pt education. Methods: Chemotherapy naïve pts with breast or gastrointestinal (GI) cancer were enrolled from November 2021-December 2022. At the baseline visit, pts were consented, given the brochure and asked to complete surveys. The Emotional Thermometer Scale (ETS) evaluates mental health, measuring distress, anxiety, depression, and anger while the Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale (MSAS) evaluates symptoms commonly seen with chemotherapy. MSAS means were also broken down into physical, psychological, and global distress index (GDI) subsets. Pts filled out the same surveys at their 6 and 12 week visits to assess change over time. Results: 40 pts completed the baseline surveys, and 36 of them had at least one additional visit. Some key demographics were: 82.2% female, 17.8% male, 22.2% GI cancer (71.4% colonic adenocarcinoma, 14.3% rectal adenocarcinoma, 14.3% anal squamous cell carcinoma), 77.8% breast cancer (81.8% ductal carcinomas, 9.1% lobular carcinomas, 9.1% invasive metaplastic carcinoma, 52.5% ER+, 42.5% PR+, 22.5% HER2+), and 27.5% of patients underwent concurrent therapies with chemotherapy. Table 1 summarizes the mean score comparisons from baseline to 6 and 12 weeks for the ETS and MSAS. We observed significantly decreased psychological symptoms at week 12 compared to baseline (p = 0.023), while physical symptoms did not change significantly (p = 0.21). Conclusions: We successfully conducted a pilot study distributing a standardized educational brochure, thus demonstrating feasibility of this intervention. Measured psychological symptoms decreased over time, while physical symptoms did not, which aligns with side effect progression from cumulative chemotherapy burden. We plan to expand standardized pt education materials to other cancer types, incorporate digital educational tools, and further explore pt education barriers. Clinical trial information: NCT04694794 .[Table: see text]

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