Objectives: Although surgery is considered the standard of care for early-stage lung cancer, there has been increased use of stereotactic radiotherapy for operable patients in recent years. Given that this modality may be perceived as a more practical treatment, we hypothesized that it might be more often delivered to patients who experience barriers to care.
Methods: The National Cancer Database (2018-2020) was queried for patients with clinical stage IA non-small cell lung cancer treated with surgery or stereotactic radiotherapy (48-60 Gy, 3-5 fractions), excluding patients with contraindications to surgery.
Background: Exercise is beneficial for persons with schizophrenia; however, high dropout rates limit the impact of interventions. Virtual exercise programs have the potential to improve engagement; however, few intervention studies of virtual programs have been conducted in this population.
Methods: This study examined qualitative data from 15 adults with schizophrenia who participated in a pilot randomized controlled trial of Virtual PACE-Life, a live, video-delivered group walking intervention guided by self-determination theory.
Background: Patient-generated health data (PGHD), which includes patient-reported outcomes (PROs) and wearable device data, may have prognostic value for cancer patients. We tested that hypothesis using data from several prospective trials where patients with locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer (LA-NSCLC) were treated with definitive chemoradiotherapy.
Methods: Cox proportional hazards models were utilized to identify the baseline patient-reported symptom that best predicted progression-free survival (PFS) duration in a trial that involved PRO-CTCAE collection (Cohort 1).