Nurse-Led Individualized Follow-Up Versus Regular Physician-Led Visits After Early Breast Cancer (MyHealth): A Phase III Randomized, Controlled Trial

Lena Saltbæk(Zealand University Hospital), Pernille Envold Bidstrup(University of Copenhagen), Randi V. Karlsen(Danish Cancer Society), Beverley Lim Høeg(Danish Cancer Society), Trine Allerslev Horsbøl(University of Southern Denmark), F. Belmonte(Danish Cancer Society), Elisabeth Wreford Andersen(Danish Cancer Society), Vibeke Zoffmann(Copenhagen University Hospital), Anne Sofie Friberg(Danish Cancer Society), Mads Nordahl Svendsen(Zealand University Hospital), Helle Gert Christensen(Zealand University Hospital), Vesna Glavicic(Zealand University Hospital), Dorte Nielsen(University of Copenhagen), Susanne Oksbjerg Dalton(University of Copenhagen), Christoffer Johansen(University of Copenhagen)
Journal of Clinical Oncology
March 18, 2024
Cited by 18Open Access
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Abstract

PURPOSE Follow-up after breast cancer with regular visits has failed to detect recurrences, be cost-effective, and address patient needs. METHODS MyHealth is a phase III randomized controlled trial (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02949167 ). Patients, who recently completed primary treatment for stage I-II breast cancer, were randomly assigned in variable block sizes and stratified by age and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 status to intervention or control follow-up. The nurse-led intervention comprised three to five individual self-management sessions, regular reporting of symptoms, and navigation to health care services. The control follow-up comprised regular outpatient visits with the physician. The primary outcome was breast cancer–specific quality of life (QoL) measured by the Trial Outcome Index-Physical/Functional/Breast summary score of the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Breast 2 years after random assignment. Secondary outcomes were fear of recurrence, anxiety, depression, and health care utilization. Analyses were intention-to-treat and P values were two-sided with 95% confidence level set at 0.005 because of multiple comparisons. RESULTS Among 1,101 eligible patients, 875 were invited and 503 were randomly assigned to control (n = 252) or intervention (n = 251) follow-up. At 2 years, patients in the intervention group reported a significantly and clinically relevant higher QoL (mean, 75.69 [standard deviation [SD], 12.27]) than patients in the control group (71.26 [SD, 14.08]), with a mean difference of 5.05 (95% CI, 3.30 to 6.79; P < .001). The intervention group reported significantly less fear of recurrence, anxiety, and depression; they had fewer physician consultations but more nurse contacts and an unchanged diagnostic imaging pattern. The effect on all outcomes was stable through a 3-year follow-up. CONCLUSION The MyHealth study suggested a new strategy for follow-up after early breast cancer as it provided significant improvements in QoL.


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