DeintensiF: Standard versus individualized deintensified follow-up after curative treatment in head and neck cancer: protocol of a randomized pilot study.
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
40380278
Description
Background
Around 70% of head and neck cancer (HNC) cases are diagnosed in an advanced stage. Improvements in treatment have led to a cure rate of up to 80-90% for early-stage and 40-50% for advanced-stage disease. However, routine follow-up involves social and financial burdens, including frequent imaging associated with radiation exposure and costs. Currently, there is no consensus on the follow-up strategy after HNC treatment, and no conclusive evidence shows a survival advantage for routine follow-up over symptom-driven self-referrals. The DeintensiF study aims to provide robust evidence, comparing standard follow-up with a tailored deintensified approach. Additionally, it seeks to explore whether early detection of recurrence/second primary malignancy in asymptomatic patients impacts survival and quality of life. The pilot phase aims to assess feasibility of patients' recruitment and adherence to the assigned follow-up strategy and patient-reported outcomes (PROs) questionnaire in the first 2 years.Methods
This randomized-controlled, multicenter, open-label, pilot study has the goal to randomize a minimum of 16 patients across three Swiss sites into two arms within 1 year. The Experimental Arm A: scheduled clinical exams every 6 months and monthly PRO with evaluation and possibility to alert for open urgent appointments; and the Control Arm B: regular visits every 3 months for the first 2 years and less frequent thereafter plus multiple scheduled imaging appointments for head and neck magnet resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT) with contrast and chest CT scans. Patients' motivation for participation or not will be explored by additional questionnaire before randomization. The primary objective during the pilot phase is to evaluate the feasibility of recruiting and randomizing patients with complete remission 6 months after treatment of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma to a deintensified and to a conventional follow-up. The secondary objective is to assess adherence to the two different follow-up strategies.Discussion
If feasible, the DeintensiF pilot study will expand from the recruited patients (detailed in the "Methods" section) to a larger cohort of advanced HNC cases in the main trial, integrating electronic PRO tailored follow-up care. This approach aims to reshape follow-up practices, enhancing patient-centered strategies and outcomes in head and neck oncology.Trial-registration
ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05388136); Swiss National Clinical Trial Portal (SNCTP000005198).
Around 70% of head and neck cancer (HNC) cases are diagnosed in an advanced stage. Improvements in treatment have led to a cure rate of up to 80-90% for early-stage and 40-50% for advanced-stage disease. However, routine follow-up involves social and financial burdens, including frequent imaging associated with radiation exposure and costs. Currently, there is no consensus on the follow-up strategy after HNC treatment, and no conclusive evidence shows a survival advantage for routine follow-up over symptom-driven self-referrals. The DeintensiF study aims to provide robust evidence, comparing standard follow-up with a tailored deintensified approach. Additionally, it seeks to explore whether early detection of recurrence/second primary malignancy in asymptomatic patients impacts survival and quality of life. The pilot phase aims to assess feasibility of patients' recruitment and adherence to the assigned follow-up strategy and patient-reported outcomes (PROs) questionnaire in the first 2 years.Methods
This randomized-controlled, multicenter, open-label, pilot study has the goal to randomize a minimum of 16 patients across three Swiss sites into two arms within 1 year. The Experimental Arm A: scheduled clinical exams every 6 months and monthly PRO with evaluation and possibility to alert for open urgent appointments; and the Control Arm B: regular visits every 3 months for the first 2 years and less frequent thereafter plus multiple scheduled imaging appointments for head and neck magnet resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT) with contrast and chest CT scans. Patients' motivation for participation or not will be explored by additional questionnaire before randomization. The primary objective during the pilot phase is to evaluate the feasibility of recruiting and randomizing patients with complete remission 6 months after treatment of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma to a deintensified and to a conventional follow-up. The secondary objective is to assess adherence to the two different follow-up strategies.Discussion
If feasible, the DeintensiF pilot study will expand from the recruited patients (detailed in the "Methods" section) to a larger cohort of advanced HNC cases in the main trial, integrating electronic PRO tailored follow-up care. This approach aims to reshape follow-up practices, enhancing patient-centered strategies and outcomes in head and neck oncology.Trial-registration
ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05388136); Swiss National Clinical Trial Portal (SNCTP000005198).
Date of Publication
2025-05-16
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
Keyword(s)
Follow-up studies
•
Head and neck neoplasms
•
Local
•
Neoplasm recurrence
•
Patient-reported outcome measures
•
Precision medicine
•
Recurrence
•
Squamous cell carcinoma of head and neck
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Mueller, S A | |
Rajan, G P | |
Morand, G B | |
Balermpas, P | |
Additional Credits
Series
Pilot and Feasibility Studies
Publisher
BioMed Central
ISSN
2055-5784
Access(Rights)
open.access