PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT
The long-term objective of this K08 Mentored Clinical Scientist Research Career Development Award is to
prepare the candidate for an independent research career in health services and communication research
improving care outcomes for patients with advanced cancer. Despite oncology practice guidelines emphasizing
alignment in patient-clinician understanding of prognosis, treatment intent, and patient values for treatment
decisions in advanced cancer, discordance is common. Consequently, one third of patients with advanced
cancer receive end-of-life care inconsistent with their preferences. Existing approaches to alleviate these gaps
in understanding to promote goal-concordant care have had disappointing results. Inadequate attention to
emotional support and managing uncertainty likely contribute to the shortcomings of existing approaches. We
hypothesize that an interactive visual aid (VIS) used by patients, their caregivers, and clinicians during an
outpatient visit can efficiently and effectively prompt the necessary communication behaviors that target
emotional support and uncertainty management. The candidate proposes an innovative approach to design
and evaluate a VIS to facilitate patient-clinician emotional support and management of uncertainty in the
context of decision-making around stopping cancer treatment (e.g., chemotherapy, radiation therapy). The
training and mentoring plan is designed to provide knowledge and skills in (1) Designing and leading clinical
trials, (2) Behavioral intervention development (3) Implementation science, and (4) Professional development.
The proposed research will assess patient-caregiver-clinician shared understanding following a serious illness
conversation in the outpatient setting (Aim 1), develop and refine a highly acceptable and usable, interactive
VIS for approaching decisions to stop cancer treatment over time (Aim 2), and evaluate the usability of the
developed VIS for patients with advanced cancer, their caregivers and clinicians during outpatient oncology
visits (Aim 3). The candidate will use the process of user-centered design and the Behavior Change Wheel
intervention development framework to guide the methods and analysis. Aim 1 is anticipated to generate novel
insights into the processes promoting shared understanding, and the patient perspective on the perceived
accuracy of clinician-generated documentation for serious illness conversations. Findings from Aim 1 will be
used to identify the existing communication gaps for structured serious illness conversations in oncology that a
VIS could address (i.e., Needs Assessment). Aims 2 and 3 will generate and evaluate a novel communication
tool – VIS – for approaching decisions to stop cancer treatment. In consultation with his team of mentors and
scientific collaborators/advisors, the candidate will use the training, the results of the research, and the
Behavior Change Wheel intervention development framework to systematically guide the next steps in this line
of work promoting goal-concordant care and submit his first R01 proposal.