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E. Harrop



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    P2.24 - Poster Session 2 - Supportive Care (ID 157)

    • Event: WCLC 2013
    • Type: Poster Session
    • Track: Supportive Care
    • Presentations: 1
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      P2.24-025 - Applying the results of the FRAGMATIC trial to real life: longitudinal qualitative study exploring the experiences of patients partcipating in a randomised Phase III clinical trial investigating the effect of FRAGMin Added To standard therapy In lung Cancer (ID 1581)

      09:30 - 09:30  |  Author(s): E. Harrop

      • Abstract

      Background
      Clinical data suggests low molecular weight heparin (LMWH) may produce a survival benefit when given to cancer patients. Several studies are being conducted in different cancer primaries to explore this hypothesis including FRAGMATIC, which will be presented at the World Lung Conference. The FRAGMATIC trial is an open label multi-centre Phase III randomised controlled trial in patients with lung cancer comparing anticancer treatment according to local practice plus dalteparin (Fragmin®), with anticancer treatment according to local practice alone. The primary outcome measure is overall survival and the secondary outcome measures include; toxicity, VTE-free survival, metastasis-free survival, quality of life, patient experience and cost utility. 2202 patients have been recruited in order to detect an advantage of 5% in overall survival at 1 year (to 30%). Fragmin is given as a daily subcutaneous injection for six months by the patients themselves or a willing partner/ carer. This may raise practical challenges regarding how applicable the results of the main trial will be to clinical practice especially with regard to quality of life and thus compliance. We conducted a longitudinal quality of life study to explore the experiences of patients participating in the FRAGMATIC trial to better inform the patient journey and practicalities of applying results to clinical practice.

      Methods
      Semi-structured interviews were held at up to three time points, with two groups of patients recruited from the intervention (n=4) and control (n=6) arms of the FRAGMATIC trial.A total of twenty interviews were analysed using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis to identify emergent themes that reflect participants' lived experience. We report data focusing on participant views and experiences of self injection for six months.

      Results
      No discernable difference in quality of life was identified between patients in the control or intervention arm who reported similar experiences of the cancer journey and its treatments. Patients on the intervention arm found daily Fragmin injections to be acceptable and a small consequence of having additional treatment as they saw it. Patients developed processes in order to administer Fragmin at similar times and described adaptive techniques to reduce discomfort and bruising. Minimal training was required to be able to inject Fragmin and few side effects were reported. The most common side effect was stinging which was short lived and bruising around injection sites. Patients reported these events did not impact upon quality of life. Overall, Fragmin was found to be an acceptable intervention, which did not pose any compliance problems.

      Conclusion
      The FRAGMATIC trail will report the impact of daily subcutaneous LMWH on overall survival in lung cancer. In this trial 1100 patients self injected Fragmin or had it administered to them. Based on qualitative interview data, Fragmin injections were well tolerated and the experiences of patients suggest that it would be relatively simple to introduce self-injecting into standard lung cancer therapy should the results of the FRAGMATIC study demonstrate a survival benefit.