Monitoring Symptoms to Help Young Women Take Hormone Therapy for Stage I-III Breast Cancer, ASPEN Study

Purpose

This phase III trial compares the effect of active symptom monitoring and patient education to patient education alone in helping young women with stage I-III breast cancer stay on their hormone therapy medicines. The patient education tool contains interactive weblinks which provide patients with education material about breast cancer and side effects of therapy. Symptom monitoring is a weblink via email or text message with questions asking about symptoms. Hormone therapy for breast cancer can cause side effects, and may cause some women to stop treatment early. Asking about symptoms more often may help women keep taking hormone therapy medicines.

Conditions

  • Anatomic Stage I Breast Cancer AJCC v8
  • Anatomic Stage II Breast Cancer AJCC v8
  • Anatomic Stage III Breast Cancer AJCC v8
  • Hormone Receptor-Positive Breast Carcinoma

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Over 18 Years
Eligible Genders
Female
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No

Inclusion Criteria

  • Participants must be female and have Stage I, II, or III hormone receptor positive breast cancer based on clinical or pathologic evaluation - Participants must have been pre- or peri-menopausal at the time of breast cancer diagnosis by satisfying one of the following: - had a menstrual period (by self-report) within the 12 months before breast cancer diagnosis, or - had a serum or plasma estradiol and/or follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) concentration consistent with premenopausal status (based on institutional standards) within the 12 months before breast cancer diagnosis or when checked after breast cancer diagnosis - Participants must have started initial treatment with standard of care oral endocrine therapy (ET) (i.e., tamoxifen, anastrozole, exemestane, or letrozole; within 14 days prior to randomization or be planning to start initial treatment with standard of care oral ET within 14 days after randomization - Participants who currently have ovarian function (estradiol above the postmenopausal range) must be planning to undergo ovarian suppression or ablation concomitantly with oral ET medication, starting before or at the same time as oral ET initiation. Participants with chemotherapy-induced amenorrhea or ovarian failure at time of registration must be planning to start ovarian suppression or ablation if they have recurrence of ovarian function during study participation (circulating estradiol concentration in the premenopausal range or recurrence of menses) - Participants must have completed surgery for treatment of breast cancer at least 14 days prior to randomization NOTE: Concomitant radiotherapy at the time of randomization and/or during study participation is allowed - Participants who received chemotherapy must have finished it at least 14 days prior to randomization NOTE: Concomitant maintenance targeted or biologic therapy (e.g., human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 [anti-HER2] therapy, poly-ADP ribose polymerase [PARP] inhibitor therapy, CDK4/6 inhibitor therapy, osteoclast inhibitor therapy) at the time of randomization and/or during study participation is allowed - Participants must be >= 18 years of age - Participants must have a complete medical history within 60 days prior to randomization - Participants must be able to complete Patient-Reported Outcome (PRO) instruments in English or Spanish Participants must: - agree to complete PROs at all scheduled assessments and - complete the pre-registration (baseline) PRO forms within 14 days prior to randomization - Participants must be able to complete symptom questions on a web browser (on a smartphone, tablet, or computer) or respond via voice on a telephone in English or Spanish. Participants must agree to complete symptom questions at all scheduled assessments NOTE: Participants who do not have access to the internet and who cannot receive telephone calls for interactive voice response system (IVRS) assessments are not eligible - Participants must be offered the opportunity to participate in specimen banking for translational medicine. With participant consent, specimens must be collected and submitted via the Southwest Oncology Group (SWOG) specimen tracking system - Participants must be informed of the investigational nature of this study and must sign and give informed consent in accordance with institutional and federal guidelines

Exclusion Criteria

  • Participants must not have distant metastatic breast cancer - Participants who have started or plan to start treatment with tamoxifen during study participation must not have received prior tamoxifen for treatment or prevention of breast cancer - Participants who have started or plan to start treatment with an aromatase inhibitor during study participation must not have received prior aromatase inhibitor therapy for treatment or prevention of breast cancer - Participants must not be taking or planning to take oral estrogen-or progesterone-containing treatments during study participation NOTES: - Participants who start or plan to start treatment with an aromatase inhibitor may have previously received tamoxifen for prevention of breast cancer or treatment of a prior cancer - Participants may have received prior treatment with an aromatase inhibitor for infertility treatment - Participants must not be planning to become pregnant during the 80 weeks of study participation - Participants must not receive additional anti-cancer treatments (i.e., experimental therapy, immunotherapy, biologics, etc.) as part of another clinical trial - Participants must not have a non-breast malignancy for which they are currently receiving treatment

Study Design

Phase
N/A
Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel Assignment
Primary Purpose
Supportive Care
Masking
None (Open Label)

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
Experimental
ARM I (ET, health education, symptom assessment)
Patients receive ET and standard of care clinic visits with a cancer provider at 12, 24, 36, 48, 60, and 72 weeks, and phone visit at 80 weeks to access ongoing use ET medication. Patients are asked 6 brief questions about symptoms weekly by email, text, or phone call for the first 6 months, then every 4 weeks for 12 months. Patients also receive a list of websites with information about breast cancer, side effects of breast cancer medicines, and ways to help with heart health. Patients have the option to submit blood specimen collection at baseline, 3, 12, and 18 months.
  • Other: Best Practice
    Standard of care hormone therapy and standard visit with clinician
    Other names:
    • standard of care
    • standard therapy
  • Procedure: Biospecimen Collection
    Undergo correlative studies
    Other names:
    • Biological Sample Collection
    • Biospecimen Collected
    • Specimen Collection
  • Procedure: Endocrine Drug Therapy
    Undergo endocrine therapy
  • Behavioral: Health Education
    Receive list of websites
  • Other: Questionnaire Administration
    Ancillary studies
  • Other: Symptom Specific Assessment Tool
    Receive a weblink via email or text message and asked 6 brief questions about symptoms
    Other names:
    • Symptom Assessment Tool
    • Symptom-Specific Assessment Tool
Active Comparator
ARM II (ET, health education)
Patients receive ET and standard of care clinic visits with a cancer provider at 12, 24, 36, 48, 60, and 72 weeks, and phone visit at 80 weeks to access ongoing use ET medication. Patients also receive a list of websites with information about breast cancer, side effects of breast cancer medicines, and ways to help with heart health. Patients have the option to submit blood specimen collection at 3, 12, and 18 months.
  • Other: Best Practice
    Standard of care hormone therapy and standard visit with clinician
    Other names:
    • standard of care
    • standard therapy
  • Procedure: Biospecimen Collection
    Undergo correlative studies
    Other names:
    • Biological Sample Collection
    • Biospecimen Collected
    • Specimen Collection
  • Procedure: Endocrine Drug Therapy
    Undergo endocrine therapy
  • Behavioral: Health Education
    Receive list of websites
  • Other: Questionnaire Administration
    Ancillary studies

Recruiting Locations

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
San Antonio, Texas 78229
Contact:
Site Public Contact
210-450-3800
phoresearchoffice@uthscsa.edu

More Details

Status
Recruiting
Sponsor
SWOG Cancer Research Network

Study Contact

Detailed Description

PRIMARY OBJECTIVE: I. To compare persistence with the initially prescribed oral endocrine therapy (ET) through 72 weeks for young women being treated for hormone-receptor positive stage I-III breast cancer randomized to Active Symptom Monitoring (ASM) + patient education or patient education alone. SECONDARY OBJECTIVES: I. To compare patient-reported adherence with the initially prescribed oral ET over time as assessed with the Voils measure between the two arms. II. To compare worst pain as assessed with the Brief Pain Inventory, in aromatase inhibitors-treated (AI-treated) participants over time between the two arms. III. To compare hot flashes as assessed with the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Endocrine Symptoms (FACT-ES) Endocrine Symptoms Scale in tamoxifen-treated participants over time between the two arms. EXPLORATORY OBJECTIVES: I. To describe key treatment-emergent symptoms as assessed with the Brief Pain Inventory, the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS-29) Profile, the PROMIS Cognitive Function, and the FACT-ES Endocrine Symptoms Scale over time between the two arms. II. To develop a composite risk prediction model (including demographics, socioeconomic variables, and clinical variables) to identify participants who are most likely to benefit from ASM. III. To examine associations between baseline symptom bother as assessed with the GP5 item from the FACT-ES and persistence with oral ET. IV. To examine the pattern by arm of treatment toxicity from the oral ET agents that are prescribed in this study over time during the first 24 weeks. V. To compare biochemically determined adherence with the initially prescribed oral ET as assessed with centrally evaluated drug concentrations and metabolites between ASM + patient education and patient education alone over time. VI. To examine associations overall and by arm between baseline estradiol concentrations evaluated centrally and development of treatment-emergent symptoms as assessed with the Brief Pain Inventory, the PROMIS-29 Profile, the PROMIS Cognitive Function, and the FACT-ES endocrine symptoms scale. VII. To determine patterns of change overall and by arm in centrally evaluated estradiol concentrations during study participation in participants with chemotherapy-induced ovarian failure, those receiving gonadotrophin releasing hormone (GnRH) agonist therapy, and those who had undergone bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy. VIII: To identify inherited genetic variants using genome-wide genotyping that contribute to development of endocrine therapy-emergent toxicity. BANKING OBJECTIVE: I. To bank specimens for future correlative studies. OUTLINE: Patients are randomized to 1 of 2 arms. ARM I: Patients receive ET and standard of care clinic visits with a cancer provider at 12, 24, 36, 48, 60, and 72 weeks, and phone visit at 80 weeks to access ongoing use ET medication. Patients are asked 6 brief questions about symptoms weekly by email, text, or phone call for the first 6 months, then every 4 weeks for 12 months. Patients also receive a list of websites with information about breast cancer, side effects of breast cancer medicines, and ways to help with heart health. Patients have the option to submit blood specimen collection at baseline, 3, 12, and 18 months. ARM II: Patients receive ET and standard of care clinic visits with a cancer provider at 12, 24, 36, 48, 60, and 72 weeks, and phone visit at 80 weeks to access ongoing use ET medication. Patients also receive a list of websites with information about breast cancer, side effects of breast cancer medicines, and ways to help with heart health. Patients have the option to submit blood specimen collection at 3, 12, and 18 months.