The EASE Study: Randomized Trial of a Novel Approach to Addressing Fear of Progression in Advanced Cancer
EASE
2 other identifiers
interventional
250
1 country
2
Brief Summary
Precision oncology has led to a growing population of adults with advanced cancer living increasingly longer lives in the face of profound uncertainty about the future, with over half reporting moderate to high fear of cancer progression (FoP). These fears are associated with anxiety and depression, over-use of healthcare, physical symptom burden, higher treatment regret, fatigue, and, in many studies, poorer quality of life. Moreover, FoP is strongly correlated with cancer-related trauma symptoms-physical hyperarousal, intrusiveness of cancer thoughts/images, and avoidance of cancer-related thoughts and feelings, suggesting overlapping symptoms. While behavioral interventions exist to target fear of recurrence in early-stage cancer survivors, there is a dearth of behavioral interventions to address FoP or cancer-related trauma symptoms in adults with advanced cancer, and no known published randomized trials of such interventions in the United States. In addition, cutting-edge developments for the treatment of trauma in general populations have not been adapted to cancer populations. To address these critical gaps, we adapted a cutting-edge behavioral treatment for trauma to reduce FoP and cancer-related trauma symptoms among adults with advanced cancer. The intervention, titled EASE, is based on written exposure therapy, an efficacious approach for reducing trauma symptoms in general populations that is better accepted and far briefer than other gold-standard approaches. EASE adapts this approach to help advanced cancer patients with elevated FoP and cancer-related trauma symptoms reduce their fear of the future by using written exposure focused on their future worst-case scenario with cancer. Informed by the NIH stage model, we evaluated EASE delivered by telehealth in an open pilot trial for 29 adults with late-stage cancer and elevated FoP and cancer-related trauma symptoms. Pilot findings show strong acceptability, feasibility, and efficacy potential. We now propose to conduct the first randomized trial of EASE, and, thus, first known randomized trial in the United States of a behavioral intervention for FoP and cancer-related trauma symptoms among adults with advanced cancer. This 2-arm trial (N=250) will compare EASE delivered by telehealth with Usual Care (UC). We aim to compare EASE to UC on FoP and cancer-related trauma symptoms (primary outcomes) and anxiety, depression, hopelessness, and quality of life, at post-intervention (Aim 1) and follow-up (Aim 2). We will evaluate mechanisms for EASE relative to UC (Aim 3). Offering EASE in both English and Spanish, and by telehealth, increases access. Simple content increases scalability. Rigorous evaluation of EASE has the potential to provide a paradigm-shifting intervention ready for dissemination and to inform evidence-based care guidelines for distressed adults with advanced cancer.
Trial Health
Trial Health Score
Automated assessment based on enrollment pace, timeline, and geographic reach
participants targeted
Target at P75+ for not_applicable
Started May 2026
Longer than P75 for not_applicable
2 active sites
Health score is calculated from publicly available data and should be used for screening purposes only.
Trial Relationships
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Study Timeline
Key milestones and dates
Study Start
First participant enrolled
May 4, 2026
CompletedFirst Submitted
Initial submission to the registry
May 28, 2026
CompletedFirst Posted
Study publicly available on registry
June 9, 2026
CompletedPrimary Completion
Last participant's last visit for primary outcome
March 1, 2030
ExpectedStudy Completion
Last participant's last visit for all outcomes
May 1, 2030
June 9, 2026
June 1, 2026
3.8 years
May 28, 2026
June 4, 2026
Conditions
Keywords
Outcome Measures
Primary Outcomes (2)
Fear of Progression Questionnaire, Short Form (with cancer as the disease)
Assesses fear of cancer progression. Higher scores = higher fear of progression.
Assessed four times with parallel timing in the control group: prior to the intervention (Pre), following session 3 of the intervention (Mid), within one week after the end of the weekly intervention (Post), at 3-month follow-up (FU).
Impact of Events Scale-Revised (with cancer as the event)
Cancer-related trauma symptoms. Higher scores = higher symptom levels.
Assessed four times with parallel timing in the control group: prior to the intervention (Pre), following session 3 of the intervention (Mid), within one week after the end of the weekly intervention (Post), at 3-month follow-up (FU).
Secondary Outcomes (5)
Concerns About Recurrence Scale (CARS overall fear scale)
Assessed four times with parallel timing in the control group: prior to the intervention (Pre), following session 3 of the intervention (Mid), within one week after the end of the weekly intervention (Post), at 3-month follow-up (FU).
Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7
Assessed four times with parallel timing in the control group: prior to the intervention (Pre), following session 3 of the intervention (Mid), within one week after the end of the weekly intervention (Post), at 3-month follow-up (FU).
Patient Health Questionnaire-8
Assessed four times with parallel timing in the control group: prior to the intervention (Pre), following session 3 of the intervention (Mid), within one week after the end of the weekly intervention (Post), at 3-month follow-up (FU).
Hopelessness Assessment in Illness Questionnaire
Assessed four times with parallel timing in the control group: prior to the intervention (Pre), following session 3 of the intervention (Mid), within one week after the end of the weekly intervention (Post), at 3-month follow-up (FU).
Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General-7 item version (FACT-G7)
Assessed four times with parallel timing in the control group: prior to the intervention (Pre), following session 3 of the intervention (Mid), within one week after the end of the weekly intervention (Post), at 3-month follow-up (FU).
Other Outcomes (13)
Valuing Questionnaire, Obstruction and Progress Scales
Assessed four times with parallel timing in the control group: prior to the intervention (Pre), following session 3 of the intervention (Mid), within one week after the end of the weekly intervention (Post), at 3-month follow-up (FU).
Death Attitude Profile Revised (DAP-R), Death Avoidance and Fear of Death Scales
Assessed four times with parallel timing in the control group: prior to the intervention (Pre), following session 3 of the intervention (Mid), within one week after the end of the weekly intervention (Post), at 3-month follow-up (FU).
Coping Orientation to Problems Experienced Inventory (COPE) - Behavioral and Emotional Disengagement Scale and Emotion Approach Coping Scale
Assessed four times with parallel timing in the control group: prior to the intervention (Pre), following session 3 of the intervention (Mid), within one week after the end of the weekly intervention (Post), at 3-month follow-up (FU).
- +10 more other outcomes
Study Arms (2)
EASE (Written Exposure-Based Coping Intervention)
EXPERIMENTALEASE intervention over 6 individual sessions.
Control: Usual Care
OTHERUsual Care (UC) consists of access to supportive care providers available at treatment sites.
Interventions
The EASE intervention includes 6-sessions of structured writing designed to reduce fear of progression (FoP) and cancer-related trauma symptoms in adults with advanced cancer. Adapted from Written Exposure Therapy (WET), EASE will be delivered via telehealth by trained interventionists through 1:1 sessions. Each session will last approximately 60 minutes. The first session begins with an assessment, where participants identify their worst-case scenario related to their cancer. In the next three sessions, participants engage in structured exposure writing about this imagined scenario, focusing on vivid, sensory-rich descriptions and thoughts and feelings. The final two sessions involve coping writing, where participants re-evaluate the realism of their scenario. If deemed unlikely, they write about a more realistic outcome and how to cope with it; if likely, they focus on coping strategies for the original scenario
Usual Care (UC) consists of access to a clinical social worker and nurse practitioners for supportive visits at patient request. To account for individual and site differences in use/availability of UC resources, patients in both arms will report use of non-study cancer supportive care using piloted trackers.
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if:
- Adults, age 18 or older
- Have been diagnosed with either (a) Stage IV metastatic cancer of any solid tumor type, (b) Stage III ovarian cancer that has recurred, (c) 'extensive stage' small cell lung cancer, or (d) glioblastomas of any staging
- Are capable at time of consent of understanding and voluntarily consenting themselves to the study, attending intervention sessions, and writing for 30 minutes, confirmed by an Eastern Cooperative Group Performance Status Scale of ≤2
- Report elevated FoP and cancer-related trauma symptoms on the screening measures: FoP-Q 12-item short version: mean score of 2.5 (or total score of 30), IES-R: mean of 1.5 (or total score of 33)
- Are fluent in English or Spanish and can read English proficiently (for the surveys, which are in English)
You may not qualify if:
- Patients who have a history of chronic untreated trauma unrelated to their cancer, psychiatric hospitalization or suicide attempt(s) in the past 2 years, or current high suicide risk, as identified in the screening.
Contact the study team to confirm eligibility.
Sponsors & Collaborators
- University of Colorado, Boulderlead
- National Cancer Institute (NCI)collaborator
- University of Colorado, Denvercollaborator
Study Sites (2)
University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
Aurora, Colorado, 80045, United States
University of Colorado Boulder
Boulder, Colorado, 80309, United States
Related Publications (3)
Arch JJ, Kirk MH, Finkelstein LB. Patient-Reported Worst-Case Scenarios in Advanced Cancer: Presence, Contents, and Predictors. Psychooncology. 2024 Dec;33(12):e70039. doi: 10.1002/pon.70039.
PMID: 39710501BACKGROUNDFinkelstein LB, Wojdak CP, Studts JL, Arch JJ. Writing Content Predicts Outcomes in Written Exposure to Worst-Case Scenarios for Advanced Cancer. J Palliat Med. 2025 Dec;28(12):1648-1653. doi: 10.1089/jpm.2024.0463. Epub 2025 Jun 12.
PMID: 40510017BACKGROUNDArch JJ, Slivjak ET, Finkelstein LB. A Novel Intervention to Reduce Fear of Progression and Trauma Symptoms in Advanced Cancer Using Written Exposure to Worst-Case Scenarios. J Palliat Med. 2024 Aug;27(8):1009-1017. doi: 10.1089/jpm.2023.0658. Epub 2024 Apr 5.
PMID: 38579139BACKGROUND
MeSH Terms
Conditions
Condition Hierarchy (Ancestors)
Study Design
- Study Type
- interventional
- Phase
- not applicable
- Allocation
- RANDOMIZED
- Masking
- DOUBLE
- Who Masked
- INVESTIGATOR, OUTCOMES ASSESSOR
- Masking Details
- The PI will be masked to condition assignment. Outcomes will be assessed in REDCap.
- Purpose
- SUPPORTIVE CARE
- Intervention Model
- PARALLEL
- Sponsor Type
- OTHER
- Responsible Party
- PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
- PI Title
- Professor
Study Record Dates
First Submitted
May 28, 2026
First Posted
June 9, 2026
Study Start
May 4, 2026
Primary Completion (Estimated)
March 1, 2030
Study Completion (Estimated)
May 1, 2030
Last Updated
June 9, 2026
Record last verified: 2026-06
Data Sharing
- IPD Sharing
- Will share
- Shared Documents
- STUDY PROTOCOL, ICF
- Access Criteria
- Data will be available by controlled access only. Data will be made available by a data repository only after approval by the PI, with input from the full research team.
De-identified study survey data and associated documentation will be made available to the research community free of charge through the Cancer Data Service (CDS), maintained by the National Cancer Institute under the Cancer Research Data Commons (CRDC) infrastructure for storing cancer research data generated by NCI funded programs.