Abstract

The purpose of this pilot study was to assess the feasibility of on-site complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) education sessions to maximize quality of life for women with ovarian cancer. The pilot intervention consisted of four weekly sessions, each focusing the techniques and benefits of a particular CAM topic (e.g., nutrition, massage, relaxation). Participants were recruited from the Center for Women’s Oncology at H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center from 2010 to 2012. Eligible participants had an ovarian cancer diagnosis with a life expectancy of at least 12 months, and were 18 years or older. The Gynecologic Oncology research nurse invited women in the outpatient clinic who matched the eligibility criteria. The research nurse explained the study and provided an informed consent form and return envelope. Because ovarian cancer is not only a rare cancer but, also, most patients seen at Moffitt have recurrent or advanced disease, many women did not have an adequate ECOG score. Many women who consented had rapid changes in health status, with morbidity and mortality outpacing recruitment of the 20 needed to proceed with the four education sessions. Baseline and follow-up surveys were conducted to assess changes in QOL, knowledge, and satisfaction with the intervention. While 27 women consented and 24 women completed the baseline survey, only five women participated in the intervention. The five women who participated were all white, and at time of consenting had a mean age of 60 (SD 9.08) and an average of 102 months (SD 120.65) since diagnosis, and were all on active treatment, except for one. The intervention pilot did not encounter difficulties with regard to recruitment, but suffered problems in achieving an adequate number of women to launch the on-site sessions because of rapidly changing morbidity and significant mortality. The team recognized that a larger-scaled intervention comprised of on-site sessions was impractical and compared attendance rates with a more convenient format currently underway in the Women’s Oncology program at Moffitt. While low participation prevented an intervention analysis of scientific merit, the study data is informative with regard to barriers, facilitators, and alternative methods for sharing useful information to women with advanced ovarian cancer. The comparison strongly suggested that CAM education for women compromised by the disease and treatment associated with ovarian cancer would best be delivered in the convenient-access format that allowed remote access to live and recorded discussions of specific topics.

Highlights

  • Estimated new gynecologic cancer cases in 2013 totaled 91,730; ovarian cancer comprised24% of those diagnoses, it accounted for 50% of gynecologic cancer deaths that same year [1]

  • This study developed and piloted an educational intervention regarding complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) among women with ovarian cancer

  • The study initially targeted women with recurrent ovarian cancer based on the rationale that this group of women would have the greatest need for potential benefits from complementary therapies

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Summary

Introduction

Estimated new gynecologic cancer cases in 2013 totaled 91,730; ovarian cancer comprised. 24% of those diagnoses, it accounted for 50% of gynecologic cancer deaths that same year [1]. Ovarian cancer causes more deaths than any other cancer of the female reproductive system, and will cause about. Because there are neither proven primary prevention methods nor definitive methods of early detection of ovarian cancer [3], only 19% of women are diagnosed at stage I, which has the highest rate of survival at 94% [4]. Despite an overall complete response rate to chemotherapy of 75%, most women will eventually experience relapse of their disease [6]. Many women will receive many additional lines of chemotherapy, relapsed disease is fatal. The impact of treatment on quality of life (QOL) is fundamentally important to these patients

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