AI Article Synopsis

  • About 40% of head and neck cancer patients face recurrence after treatment, prompting a need for modified follow-up strategies beyond current guidelines, which lack strong evidence for effectiveness.
  • PETNECK2 is a UK-based study that is testing a new follow-up approach using PET-CT scans and allowing patients to manage their own follow-up based on symptoms.
  • The study aims to improve overall survival rates and gather insights on patient experiences and anxiety regarding cancer recurrence through a randomized controlled trial and embedded feasibility study.

Article Abstract

Background: Approximately 40% of treated head and neck cancer (HNC) patients develop recurrence. The risk of recurrence declines with time from treatment. Current guidelines recommend clinical follow-up every two months for the first two years after treatment, with reducing intensity over the next three years. However, evidence for the effectiveness of these regimes in detecting recurrence is lacking, with calls for more flexible, patient-centred follow-up strategies.

Methods: PETNECK2 is a UK-based multi-centre programme examining a new paradigm of follow-up, using positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET-CT)-guided, symptom-based, patient-initiated surveillance. This paradigm is being tested in a unblinded, non-inferiority, phase III, randomised controlled trial (RCT). Patients with HNC, one year after completing curative intent treatment, with no clinical symptoms or signs of loco-regional or distant metastasis will be randomised using a 1:1 allocation ratio to either regular scheduled follow-up, or to PET-CT guided, patient-initiated follow-up. Patients at a low risk of recurrence (negative PET-CT) will receive a face-to-face education session along with an Information and Support (I&S) resource package to monitor symptoms and be in control of initiating an urgent appointment when required. The primary outcome of the RCT is overall survival. The RCT also has an in-built pilot, a nested QuinteT Recruitment Intervention (QRI), and a nested mixed-methods study on patient experience and fear of cancer recurrence (FCR). An initial, single-arm feasibility study has been completed which determined the acceptability of the patient-initiated surveillance intervention, the completion rates of baseline questionnaires, and optimised the I&S resource prior to implementation in the RCT.

Discussion: We hypothesise that combining an additional 12-month post-treatment PET-CT scan and I&S resource will both identify patients with asymptomatic recurrence and identify those at low risk of future recurrence who will be empowered to monitor their symptoms and seek early clinical follow-up when recurrence is suspected. This change to a patient-centred model of care may have effects on both quality of life and fear of cancer recurrence.

Trial Registration: ISRCTN: 13,709,798; 15-Oct-2021.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11234619PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12885-024-12470-9DOI Listing

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