Research Alert

Newswise — Key Points:

Question  Can behavioral economic implementation strategies (“nudges”) for clinicians and/or patients improve rates of serious illness conversation (SIC) among patients with cancer at high risk of 180-day mortality?

Findings  In this 2 × 2 factorial, cluster randomized clinical trial including 4450 patients with cancer across academic and community sites, combined clinician and patient nudges were associated with a marginal improvement in rates of SIC documentation (ratio of hazard ratios, 1.55) compared with an active control.

Meaning  Combining clinician- and patient-directed nudges may help to promote SICs in routine cancer care.

Abstract:

Importance  Serious illness conversations (SICs) that elicit patients’ values, goals, and care preferences reduce anxiety and depression and improve quality of life, but occur infrequently for patients with cancer. Behavioral economic implementation strategies (nudges) directed at clinicians and/or patients may increase SIC completion.

Objective  To test the independent and combined effects of clinician and patient nudges on SIC completion.

Design, Setting, and Participants  A 2 × 2 factorial, cluster randomized trial was conducted from September 7, 2021, to March 11, 2022, at oncology clinics across 4 hospitals and 6 community sites within a large academic health system in Pennsylvania and New Jersey among 163 medical and gynecologic oncology clinicians and 4450 patients with cancer at high risk of mortality (≥10% risk of 180-day mortality).

Interventions  Clinician clusters and patients were independently randomized to receive usual care vs nudges, resulting in 4 arms: (1) active control, operating for 2 years prior to trial start, consisting of clinician text message reminders to complete SICs for patients at high mortality risk; (2) clinician nudge only, consisting of active control plus weekly peer comparisons of clinician-level SIC completion rates; (3) patient nudge only, consisting of active control plus a preclinic electronic communication designed to prime patients for SICs; and (4) combined clinician and patient nudges.

Main Outcomes and Measures  The primary outcome was a documented SIC in the electronic health record within 6 months of a participant’s first clinic visit after randomization. Analysis was performed on an intent-to-treat basis at the patient level.

Results  The study accrued 4450 patients (median age, 67 years [IQR, 59-75 years]; 2352 women [52.9%]) seen by 163 clinicians, randomized to active control (n = 1004), clinician nudge (n = 1179), patient nudge (n = 997), or combined nudges (n = 1270). Overall patient-level rates of 6-month SIC completion were 11.2% for the active control arm (112 of 1004), 11.5% for the clinician nudge arm (136 of 1179), 11.5% for the patient nudge arm (115 of 997), and 14.1% for the combined nudge arm (179 of 1270). Compared with active control, the combined nudges were associated with an increase in SIC rates (ratio of hazard ratios [rHR], 1.55 [95% CI, 1.00-2.40]; P = .049), whereas the clinician nudge (HR, 0.95 [95% CI, 0.64-1.41; P = .79) and patient nudge (HR, 0.99 [95% CI, 0.73-1.33]; P = .93) were not.

Conclusions and Relevance  In this cluster randomized trial, nudges combining clinician peer comparisons with patient priming questionnaires were associated with a marginal increase in documented SICs compared with an active control. Combining clinician- and patient-directed nudges may help to promote SICs in routine cancer care.

Journal Link: JAMA Network Open, Jul-2024

MEDIA CONTACT
Register for reporter access to contact details
CITATIONS

JAMA Network Open, Jul-2024

Download PDF
171985707522717_takvorian_2024_oi_240611_1719248990.28257.pdf