Abstract 819: Feasibility of patient centered home care (PCHC) to reduce disparities in high-risk black men with advanced prostate cancer
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Date
2024-03-15
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Volume 84, Issue 6_Supplement POSTER PRESENTATIONS - PROFFERED ABSTRACTS
Abstract
The objective of our study is to evaluate the feasibility, acceptance, and impact of
patient-centered home care (PCHC) on patient reported outcomes (PROs) and health
related quality of life (HQoL) of black men with advanced prostate cancer (CaP).
Meeting patients where they are and offering treatment in or closer to their homes
reduce psychological distress and increase treatment compliance, especially for
disadvantaged patients in rural areas, those on low incomes, with poor access to
transport, elderly and people with disabilities. In 2023, Mayo Clinic has developed the
Cancer Care Beyond Walls (CCBW) program, a cancer care delivery model that
integrates virtual with in facility treatment and provides a package of care to support
administration of cancer-directed therapy (chemotherapy, immunotherapy, hormonal
therapy) and/or supportive care in the patients’ homes. Our study will assess if patients
and families are comfortable with cancer therapy at home, what factors influences their
decision, and use this data to inform our understanding of the proportion of the black
men with advanced CaP who would be willing to receive and would benefit from this
level of care at home. Patients with advanced CaP from our practice requiring active
anti-cancer therapy are administered a brief questionnaire regarding preference for
location of therapy at the infusion center or in the home, with perceived difficulties and
advantages of each approach. A focus group session with prostate cancer survivor
advocates is also conducted to capture patients’ thoughts, feelings, attitudes, and
questions towards cancer treatments being administered at home versus a hospital
setting. In addition, we are conducting an observational study of 20 patients with
advanced prostate cancer receiving supportive care/symptom management and/or anti
cancer therapy in the home as part of the Mayo Clinic CCBW Program to assess the
safety of cancer directed therapy when administered at home by a home health provider
with remote patient monitoring and command center support, and establish the impact
of home cancer treatment administration on patient-reported function and global
health/quality of life, patient-reported symptoms, clinical outcomes, and cost of care.
Successful completion of the project will deliver data on patient understanding and
acceptability of cancer care at home, strategies for overcoming barriers to care for
underserved communities, and the foundation from which we discover, translate and
apply new knowledge in administering personalized care to vulnerable populations.