Scalable Telehealth Cancer Care: integrated healthy lifestyle program to live well after cancer treatment

Bonnie Spring*, Sofia F. Garcia, Elyse Daly, Maia Jacobs, Monisola Jayeoba, Neil Jordan, Sheetal Kircher, Masha Kocherginsky, Rana Mazzetta, Teresa Pollack, Laura Scanlan, Courtney Scherr, Brian Hitsman, Siobhan M. Phillips

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Northwestern University’s Center for Scalable Telehealth Cancer Care (STELLAR) is 1 of 4 Cancer Moonshot Telehealth Research Centers of Excellence programs funded by the National Cancer Institute to establish an evidence base for telehealth in cancer care. STELLAR is grounded in the Institute of Medicine’s vision that quality cancer care includes not only disease treatment but also promotion of long-term health and quality of life (QOL). Cigarette smoking, insufficient physical activity, and overweight and obesity often co-occur and are associated with poorer treatment response, heightened recurrence risk, decreased longevity, diminished QOL, and increased treatment cost for many cancers. These risk behaviors are prevalent in cancer survivors, but their treatment is not routinely integrated into oncology care. STELLAR aims to foster patients’ long-term health and QOL by designing, implementing, and sustaining a novel telehealth treatment program for multiple risk behaviors to be integrated into standard cancer care. Telehealth delivery is evidence-based for health behavior change treatment and is well suited to overcome access and workflow barriers that can otherwise impede treatment receipt. This paper describes STELLAR’s 2-arm randomized parallel group pragmatic clinical trial comparing telehealth-delivered, coach-facilitated multiple risk behavior treatment vs self-guided usual care for the outcomes of reach, effectiveness, and cost among 3000 cancer survivors who have completed curative intent treatment. This paper also discusses several challenges encountered by the STELLAR investigative team and the adaptations developed to move the research forward.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)83-91
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of the National Cancer Institute - Monographs
Volume2024
Issue number64
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 1 2024

Funding

This work was supported by the National Cancer Institute (P50CA271353, PI Spring, MPIs: Garcia, Hitsman, and Phillips).

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Oncology
  • Cancer Research

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