Computer Training Program for Younger Patients With a Brain Tumor Who Underwent Radiation Therapy
Brain Neoplasm, Recurrent Brain Neoplasm
About this trial
This is an interventional supportive care trial for Brain Neoplasm
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
Patient must be newly diagnosed or relapsed/progressed with a brain tumor that has not previously been treated with CRT
- Note: COG therapeutic study participation is not required for ACCL10P1 enrollment
Patient enrollment must occur within 4 calendar months following completion of CRT
- Reminder: after patient enrollment, baseline testing followed by randomization must occur within 2-4 months after completion of CRT
- The patient must have an identified caregiver who is willing and able to oversee the training practice during the intervention period (ie, for 5-9 weeks starting approximately 3 months after completion of CRT)
- The patient must have access to a telephone and phone number where they can be reached
- The patient and caregiver must have reading, speaking and listening comprehension of English
- All patients and/or their parents or legal guardians must sign a written informed consent (patient assent is also recommended when applicable according to each institution's policy)
- All institutional, Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and National Cancer Institute (NCI) requirements for human studies must be met
Exclusion Criteria:
- Patients with pontine glioma are not eligible
- Patients with an estimated survival of less than one year are not eligible
- Patients with a history of traumatic brain injury prior to tumor diagnosis are not eligible
- Patients with a motor, visual, or auditory handicap that prevents computer use (e.g., unresolved posterior fossa syndrome) are not eligible to participate in this trial
- Patients with full-scale intelligence quotient (IQ) < 70 per previous testing OR existing diagnosis of/educational classification as a student with an intellectual disability are not eligible
Sites / Locations
- Children's Hospital Colorado
- Alfred I duPont Hospital for Children
- Children's National Medical Center
- Broward Health Medical Center
- Golisano Children's Hospital of Southwest Florida
- Nemours Children's Clinic-Jacksonville
- Nemours Children's Hospital
- Tampa General Hospital
- Children's Healthcare of Atlanta - Egleston
- Saint Luke's Cancer Institute - Boise
- Blank Children's Hospital
- C S Mott Children's Hospital
- Children's Mercy Hospitals and Clinics
- Washington University School of Medicine
- Albany Medical Center
- Duke University Medical Center
- Wake Forest University Health Sciences
- Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
- Medical University of South Carolina
- East Tennessee Childrens Hospital
- Saint Jude Children's Research Hospital
- UT Southwestern/Simmons Cancer Center-Dallas
- University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
- Virginia Commonwealth University/Massey Cancer Center
- Seattle Children's Hospital
- Providence Sacred Heart Medical Center and Children's Hospital
- University of Wisconsin Carbone Cancer Center
- Hospital for Sick Children
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Experimental
Arm I (interactive training program)
Arm II (non-adaptive training program)
Patients undergo a home-based, computerized, interactive training program comprising 3-5 sessions of 15-45 minutes every week for 5-9 weeks. The program contains twelve visually engaging and interesting exercises that target skills involving visual-spatial and verbal WM. The program is adaptive in a way that each difficulty task is automatically adjusted on a trial-by-trail basis to match a patient's current WM. Each patient has an interventional coach who has online access to patient's training sessions and outcomes (pass or fail). Coaches are able to modify the training sequence or make suggestions to patients and/or parents about how progress can be maximized. Coaches also have telephone meetings with patients and/or families once a week to ensure compliance, track progress, provide feedback, and answer questions that arise during training.
Patients undergo a home-based, computerized, interactive, non-adaptive training program comprising 3-5 sessions of 15-45 minutes a week for 5-9 weeks. Each patient also has an interventional coach as in arm I. Patients in both arms complete a brief neuropsychological/behavioral assessment comprising the WIS-IV, the CMS, and the CVLT-C at baseline, after completion of study, and at 6 months after completion of study. Additionally, parents complete a parent-report questionnaire to gather information about patient's behaviors, thoughts, emotions, adaptive skills, and social and functional impairment. Parents and children also complete surveys about the program regarding technical feasibility, adherence, ease-of-use, and satisfaction.