Grant Details
| Grant Number: |
4R37CA255875-06 Interpret this number |
| Primary Investigator: |
Yanez, Betina |
| Organization: |
Northwestern University At Chicago |
| Project Title: |
Technology Facilitated Behavioral Intervention for Depression Among Diverse Patients in Ambulatory Oncology |
| Fiscal Year: |
2026 |
Abstract
Project Summary / Abstract
Depression is one of the most common psychological comorbidities experienced throughout the cancer
continuum. Elevated depressive symptoms in oncology patients is a major concern as unmanaged depressive
symptoms in cancer patients is associated with poor health-related quality of life (HRQoL), poor adherence to
cancer treatments, delayed return to work and baseline function, greater emergency department visits, greater
risk of suicide, and higher all-cause mortality. Behavioral interventions for the management of depression are
efficacious, but scalability and implementation of these evidence-based interventions in oncology is limited.
Health information technologies (HIT) provide an ideal opportunity to expedite the administration, scoring, and
interpretation of depression screening with well-validated, brief and precise measurement tools that can capture
actionable data to screen for depression, and deliver pragmatic and scalable evidence-based behavioral
interventions that are proven to reduce depressive symptomatology across various other populations. Despite
the benefits of these HITs, use of technology-based models to screen and deliver evidence-based behavioral
treatments that address the depressive symptoms in cancer remains underdeveloped and poorly implemented.
We will evaluate the effectiveness and the implementation of an evidence-based HIT behavioral treatment for
cancer patients with elevated depressive symptoms. This HIT treatment combines systematic, electronic health
record-integrated screening for depressive symptoms with an individually-tailored HIT interventions to address
gaps in the treatment of depression among cancer patients. The study takes place across two distinct health
systems in two major metropolitan areas—Chicago and Miami (Northwestern Medicine and University of Miami
Health System). We aim to conduct a pragmatic Type I effectiveness-implementation hybrid trial of My Cancer
Support—an evidence-based, tailored behavioral HIT program for the management of elevated depressive
symptoms—in ambulatory oncology care settings within two large health systems. We will establish the
effectiveness of My Cancer Support on depressive symptoms(i.e., primary outcome) and anxiety, HRQoL, and
health services use (i.e. secondary outcomes) compared to usual care. We will evaluate the process of
implementing My Cancer Support and its impact on patient and system-level outcomes, including reach,
adoption, maintenance, and acceptability. Next, we will identify facilitators and barriers to wide-scale
implementation of My Cancer Support beyond Northwestern Medicine and University of Miami Health System.
Finally, we will explore whether the effects of My Cancer Support vary across SES, language, disease severity,
severity of depressive symptoms, recruitment sites, and other patient and clinical characteristics.
Publications
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