eHealth Platforms Facilitate Prostate Cancer Shared Care: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Research Question and Search Strategy
2.2. Inclusion Criteria
2.3. Shared Care Application Definition
2.4. Risk of Bias Assessment (Quality Evaluation)
3. Results
3.1. Study Selection and Characteristics
3.2. Participant Characteristics
3.3. eHealth CaP Shared Care Platform Characteristics
3.4. Intervention Characteristics
3.4.1. Holistic Needs Assessment (HNA) Tools
3.4.2. Symptom Tracking and Management
Title | Author (Year), Journal | Study Design | Study Population | eHealth Shared Care Modality | eHealth Intervention | Comparator | Outcomes | Duration | Conclusion |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Integrated Care in Prostate Cancer (ICARE-P): Non-randomized Controlled Feasibility Study of Online Holistic Needs Assessment, Linking the Patient and the Health Care Team [21] | Nanton et al. (JMIR), 2017 | Protocol—Non-randomized Controlled Feasibility Study | N/A | Web-based, adaptive, cancer-specific needs assessment | Composite Holistic Needs Assessment Adaptive Tool-Prostate (CHAT-P)—seeks to provide a holistic needs assessment (HNA) ranging from patient-reported outcome measures to information provision to financial and legal aids. It was used as a method for PROM, education, and communication adjunct | Nil | N/A | 9 months | N/A |
A Web-Based Prostate Cancer‚ Specific Holistic Needs Assessment (CHAT-P): Multimethod Study From Concept to Clinical Practice [12] | Nanton (2022), JMIR | Multimethod Study | 16 patients from 2 outpatient clinics. 5 from site 1, 11 from site 2. RP 3, AS 8, RT 2, Unknown 3. No comparator. | Nil | No clinical outcomes. Qualitative data on application usability only: (user interface and design, suitability of content, personal value, and implementation and use in the clinical care pathway | 5 years | First web-based interactive platform for cancer-specific HNA. No clinical reported outcomes. | ||
Web-Based Asynchronous Tool to Facilitate Communication Between Primary Care Providers and Cancer Specialists: Pragmatic Randomized Controlled Trial [13] | Petrovic (JMIR), 2023 | Pragmatic randomised controlled trial | 173 patients randomised to either interventiongroup (eOncoNote + usual inter-clinician communication) or control. 104 (60.1%) patients in the survivorship phase (breast and colorectal cancer) and 69 (39.9%) patients in the treatment phase (breast and prostate cancer). | Web- and text-based asynchronous system | eOncoNote—designed to facilitate communication between care providers | Control group (usual communication only), including 104 (60.1%) patients in the survivorship phase (breast and colorectal cancer) and 69 (39.9%) patients in the treatment phase (breast and prostate cancer) | Primary outcome: patient-reported team and cross-boundary continuity (Nijmegen Continuity Questionnaire) (no significant difference)Secondary outcome: Generalized Anxiety Disorder Screener (GAD-7), Patient Health Questionnaire on Major Depression, and Picker Patient Experience Questionnaire | 12 months | eOncoNote had no significant effect on patient-reported continuity of care, but reduced patient anxiety at long-term follow-up (GAD-7 p < 0.004) |
Implementing Electronic Health Record‚ Integrated Screening of Patient-Reported Symptoms and Supportive Care Needs in a Comprehensive Cancer Centre [19] | Garcia et al. (2019), Cancer | Prospective observational study | 3521 oncology patients (51.6%) completed 8162 assessments (PROMIS CAT T); approximately 55% of the responding patients completed 2 or more surveys | Patient portal | PROMIS CAT T (EPIC, MyChart) This oncology study integrated a custom-built patient-reported outcome measure survey (PROMIS CAT T) into an existing EHR (Epic). 51.6% of patients enrolled completed 8162 assessments, identifying prevalent symptoms and care needs | Computer-scored and benchmarked on the basis of normative data from patients with cancer and the general population | Patient endorsement of supportive care needs was associated with significantly higher anxiety, depression, fatigue, and pain interference scores and lower physical function scores. Patients who triggered clinical alerts tended to be younger and more recently diagnosed, to have greater comorbidities, and to be a racial/ethnic minority. Patients who triggered clinical alerts had more healthcare service encounters in the ensuing month | 32 months (January 2015–August 2017) | EHR integration enabled efficient PROM and facilitated clinical review when clinical alerts activated. |
Implementation of patient-reported outcomes for symptom management in oncology practice through the SIMPRO research consortium: a protocol for a pragmatic type II hybrid effectiveness-implementation multi-center cluster-randomized stepped wedge trial [20] | Hassett et al. (2022), Trials | Multi-center cluster-randomized stepped wedge trial | Oncology and surgical oncology patients (planned) | Smartphone Application | Epic patient portal with novel eSyM eSyM supports real-time symptom tracking for patients, automated clinician alerts for severe symptoms, and specialised reports to facilitate population management. | Patients who started chemotherapy or had surgery before eSyM deployment (i.e., control epi- sodes) | Primary Outcome: ED treat-and-release event within 30 days of starting chemotherapy or being discharged following surgery. Secondary outcomes: include hospitalization rates, chemotherapy use (time to initiation and duration of therapy), and patient quality of life and satisfaction | On-going (approved in 2018; due to finish end of 2023) | N/A |
Early detection and management of symptoms using an interactive smartphone application (Interaktor) during radiotherapy for prostate cancer [14] | Sundberg (2016), Support Care Cancer | Two centre non-randomized controlled study in Sweden | 130 patients undergoing radiotherapy for localized prostate cancer, 64 (control group) and 66 (intervention group) | Interactive Mobile Application for smartphone/ tablet | Interaktor offers daily symptom scoring with a 14:00 reminder for incomplete forms. It provides self-care advice and alerts nursing staff for targeted patient contact during business hours. The system includes patient symptom assessment, a web interface for monitoring, a risk assessment model sending alerts to healthcare providers, evidence-based self-care guidance, and symptom history graphs. It tracks 14 symptoms on weekdays, post-radiotherapy. Researchers provided usage instructions, self-care advice, checklists, and tech support. Self-reports went to study nurses via a secure interface | 64 (control group)—historically controlled: balanced regarding demographics and clinical characteristics, except that the CG showed a statistically significant lower level of education. At baseline (T1), there were no statistically significant differences between the IG and the CG regarding any of the outcome measures. | - 3 surveys EORTC QLQ-C30 at: T1 (treatment initiation), T2 (treatment completion), and T3 (3 months post completion). Radiotherapy of varying duration (5–8 weeks—EBRT +/− HDR | ~6 months) | Interaktor group had significantly lower levels of fatigue, nausea, insomnia, and urinary symptoms at end of treatment and 3 months post. mHealth tools aid facilitating supportive care needs during cancer treatment and contribute to improved patient outcomes. |
Adherence to Report and Patient Perception of an Interactive App for Managing Symptoms During Radiotherapy for Prostate Cancer: Descriptive Study of Logged and Interview Data [24] | Langius-Ekl√∂f et al. (2017), JMIR Cancer | Descriptive Study | 66 patients with prostate cancer receiving radiotherapy | Nil | Primary Outcome: Not reported. Inferred to be adherence to reporting symptoms daily: 87% (median 92%, range 16%–100%) | Between 56 and 77 days | Use of a shared care application (Interaktor) increased patients’ sense of security, feeling of well-being and ability to self-manage symptoms. | ||
Patients’ Perspective on Participation in Care With or Without the Support of a Smartphone App During Radiotherapy for Prostate Cancer: Qualitative Study [23] | Nyman (2017), JMIR MHEALTH AND UHEALTH | Multicentre RCT, Qualitative | 28 prostate cancer patients, 17 intervention group (smartphone app), 11 control (standard care) | 11 patients in control group (standard care) | Primary Outcome: Not stated. Main themes explored in results: mutual participation (improved in intervention), fight for participation, requirement for participation, and participation in getting basic needs satisfied | Not specified | Interactive apps for symptom reporting enable targeted real-time health provider contact and can increase patient participation in care. | ||
Effects of an interactive mHealth innovation for early detection of patient- reported symptom distress with focus on participatory care: protocol for a study based on prospective, randomised, controlled trials in patients with prostate and breast cancer [25] | Langius-Eklöf et al. (2017) BMC Cancer | Protocol RCT for Interaktor | 150 prostate cancer patients | Standard treatment and care consist of neo adjuvant chemotherapy and regular visits to the physician and the oncology contact nurse prior to every treatment occasion | Outcomes concerning HRQoL, symptom distress, perception of individual care, sense of coherence and health literacy (EORTC-QLC-C30, Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale (MSAS), Individual Care scale (ICS)) | 18 weeks for breast cancer, 9 weeks for prostate cancer | N/A | ||
Engagement in an Interactive App for Symptom Self-Management during Treatment in Patients With Breast or Prostate Cancer: Mixed Methods Study [15] | Crafoord (2020), Journal of Medical Internet Research | Two separate randomized controlled trials | Two distinct populations: 149 (74 intervention) patients receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer and 146 (73 intervention) patients receiving radiotherapy for prostate cancer | Control group (standard care 75 breast, 73 prostate) | Primary Outcome: Not reported. Inferred to be adherence: 83% | High patient engagement with application (83% daily symptom scoring), feeling of added support and safety, easy method of direct contact with healthcare professionals. | |||
Patients’ Individualized Care Perceptions and Health Literacy Using an Interactive App During Breast and Prostate Cancer Treatment [22] | Crafoord et al. (2023), Computer Informatics Nursing | Control group (standard care 75 breast, 73 prostate) | Primary outcome: Individualized Care ScaleControl group rated individuality in the care delivered lower regarding decision control (ICS-B, Dec-B) compared intervention group at follow-up (p = 0.041 effect size of 0.4. No other differences between the interventionand control groups were observed. | For patients treated for prostate cancer, application use had a moderately positive effect on their perception of individualisation in care, decision control, and ability to find and understand health information. However, no such effects were observed in patients treated for breast cancer. | |||||
Promoting integrated care in prostate cancer through online prostate cancer-specific holistic needs assessment: a feasibility study in primary care [16] | Clarke (2019), | 9-month non-randomised cluster controlled feasibility study | 14 general practices (8 intervention and 6 control), and 41 men (29 intervention and 12 control) | Digital online Platform | Online prostate cancer-specific holistic needs assessment (sHNA) 3 times over 9 months and shared digital communication | 12 control patients—standard care | Primary Outcome: Feasibility and acceptability—Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) questionnaire returned by 11/29 patients (mainly acceptable—common issues logging in) Patient-reported outcome measures—Nil significant difference | 9 Months | sHNA proved useful in identifying red flag symptoms, and helping practice nurses decide when to seek further medical care for the patients. There was a high level of acceptability for patients and HCPs. However, integration of care did notoccur as intended because of problems linking hospital and general practice IT systems |
Enhancing survivorship care planning for patients with localised prostate cancer using a couple-focused web-based, mHealth program: the results of a pilot feasibility study [26] | Song et al. (2020), Journal of Cancer Survivorship | Two-group randomised controlled pilot study | 62 Dyads, 31 control (SCP), 31 intervention group (SCP + PERC) | Web-based mHealth program | PERC (Patient Education Resources for Couples) designed for prostate cancer patients and their partners. It can be accessed on any device and includes modules on teamwork, managing treatment side effects, and promoting healthy behaviours. The program offers social support, including online forums, meetings with a health educator, and a resource centre | 31 patients in control group (SCP) | Primary outcome: QOL (27-item Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy General Scale, FACT-G). Trend towards improved QOL with no statistical significance (FACT-G physical: 0.34, p = 0.27; social: 0.97, p = 0.08; emotional: 0.55, p = 0.16; and total score: 0.65, p = 0.35) | 6 months | It is feasible to integrate existing web-based interventions, such as PERC, into standardised SCPs. Doing so improves patient symptom management and satisfaction, and enables fewer medical visits. |
A novel mHealth App (RyPros) for prostate cancer management: An accessibility and acceptability study [18] | Wang (2021), Translational Andrology and Urology | Pilot study; “accessibility and acceptability study” | 32 participants were enrolled, of whom 28 completed the 4-week follow-up | mHealth Application | RyPros. mHeath app covering 4 domains: dynamic visualisation, reminders, assessments, and messaging | Nil | Primary Outcome: Not stated Inferred 1. Participation: 87.5% (28/32) 2. Acceptability:(64%) liked the app, and most participants (71%) were satisfied | 4 weeks | In this small pilot study, RyPros showed mostly positive user satisfaction, with the most useful domain the messaging function. |
Acceptability and usability of a patient portal for men with prostate cancer in follow-up care [27] | O’Connor et al. (2022), Frontiers in Digital Health | Mixed methods evaluation | Prostate cancer patients: sixty percent (1556/2599) of those who were eligible chose to register to use the portal | Patient online web-based portal | TrueNTH. Key functions include finding patient information, messaging the clinical team, checking PSA results, completing a Health MOT (Holistic needs assessment), and Patient education | Nil | Primary Outcome: Not Stated Inferred Participation: Sixty percent of eligible patients registered to use the portal. Of these, 37% logged in at least once over a 6-month period and 52% over 12 months | 3 years with interviews over the course of 3 months after introduction | A large proportion of participants found the patient portal acceptable and easy to use, with younger age correlating to registration (p < 0.001). |
Designing Tailored Internet Support to Assist Cancer Patients in Illness Management [28] | Ruland et al. (2007), AMIA symposium Proceedings | Randomised Control Trial | Planned 320 breast and prostate cancer patients from throughout Norway | Online computer interactive application | WebChoice. An Interactive eHealth application developed to assist cancer patients in managing their illness. It comprises of 5 parts: (1) Assessment (2) Self-management (3) Patient information (4) Communication (5) Diary | 1 year | N/A | ||
Evaluation of different features of an eHealth application for personalised illness management support: Cancer patients‚ use and appraisal of usefulness [17] | Ruland (2013), IJMI | 320 breast and prostate cancer patients from throughout Norway, 162 in experimental group, of these 103 logged on at least twice and included as active users | 163 patients in control group (information sheet with suggestions for publicly available, cancer-relevant Internet sites) | Primary outcome: Symptom distress thorugh Memorial Symptom Assessment ScaleYShort Form (MSAS-SF). Only significance was drop in Global Distress Index (p = 0.04) | Patient usage and value of WebChoice varied. Most useful function was direct communication with nursing staff. |
Application | PROM | Messaging Function | Education/Self-Care Tools | Shared Care Plan | Integration with Hospital EMR | Integration with Primary Health EMR | Implementation Strategy |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CHAT-P | Produces RED-flag messages | “Theoretically driven implementation strategy is required” | |||||
sHNA (CHAT-P in GP) | Integration of care did not occur as intended because of problems linking hospital and general practice IT systems. | ||||||
e-OncoNote | GP and specialist messaging. No patient messaging function. | Difficulties in recruiting | |||||
PROMIS CAT T | Instant messaging | Hospital implementation strategy only | |||||
eSYM | Instant messaging | Multi-institutional hospital implementation strategy only | |||||
Interaktor | |||||||
PERC | |||||||
RyPros | Instant messaging | ||||||
TrueNTH | E-mail style communication | ||||||
WebChoice | Anonymous forum for group discussion |
3.4.3. Patient-Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs)
3.4.4. Communication Platforms
3.4.5. Patient Education and Support
3.5. Control Groups and Outcome Measures
4. Discussion
4.1. Contrasting Enabling Strategies and Barriers
4.2. Retrofitting Existing Systems vs. Creation of Novel Applications
4.3. Implementation Barriers
4.4. Within Hospitals or within Primary Care
4.5. Common Strengths eHealth Applications: Why Move Away from Paper-Based Systems?
4.6. Common Weaknesses of eHealth Applications
4.7. Gaps and Limitations in Contemporary Practice
4.7.1. Application Factors
4.7.2. Study Design Factors
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Homewood, D.C.; Mcdonald, J.; Valaydon, Z.; Ogluszko, C.; Sukocheva, O.A.; Tse, E.; Corcoran, N.M.; Iyngkaran, G. eHealth Platforms Facilitate Prostate Cancer Shared Care: A Systematic Review. Healthcare 2024, 12, 1768. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12171768
Homewood DC, Mcdonald J, Valaydon Z, Ogluszko C, Sukocheva OA, Tse E, Corcoran NM, Iyngkaran G. eHealth Platforms Facilitate Prostate Cancer Shared Care: A Systematic Review. Healthcare. 2024; 12(17):1768. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12171768
Chicago/Turabian StyleHomewood, David C., Jodie Mcdonald, Zina Valaydon, Cindy Ogluszko, Olga A. Sukocheva, Edmund Tse, Niall M. Corcoran, and Guru Iyngkaran. 2024. "eHealth Platforms Facilitate Prostate Cancer Shared Care: A Systematic Review" Healthcare 12, no. 17: 1768. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12171768
APA StyleHomewood, D. C., Mcdonald, J., Valaydon, Z., Ogluszko, C., Sukocheva, O. A., Tse, E., Corcoran, N. M., & Iyngkaran, G. (2024). eHealth Platforms Facilitate Prostate Cancer Shared Care: A Systematic Review. Healthcare, 12(17), 1768. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12171768