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Investigating the Efficacy of a Paediatric Fertility Preservation Decision Aid in Parents and Adolescents and Young Adults (CAYA) Cancer Survivors
Sponsor: Murdoch Childrens Research Institute
Summary
The current standard of care for paediatric patients with cancer regarding preservation of their fertility (FP) is to provide high-quality information during the clinical consultation process. However, this approach depends on health provider knowledge and communication and has been shown to be sub-optimal in some situations. This impairs the critical decision-making of patients regarding fertility testing, utilization of gametes, and continuing payment of storage fees. The fertility preservation decision aid (FP DA) may lead to a greater understanding of their fertility status for participants. This knowledge may allow participants the opportunity to assess potential fertility issues prior to the end of their reproductive window, helping to minimize missed opportunities for parenthood. This research study aims to assess the effectiveness of the use of the FP DA on unmet fertility information needs when it is provided in addition to high-quality information in parents of cancer survivors and CAYA cancer survivors compared to high-quality information alone.
Official title: A Double Blind Randomised Controlled Trial of a Paediatric Fertility Preservation Decision Aid in Parents and Adolescents and Young Adults (CAYA) Cancer Survivors
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
16 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
358
Start Date
2025-12-08
Completion Date
2026-07
Last Updated
2025-12-16
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Decision-aid
Decision Aids (DA) are evidence-based clinical tools developed for patients to supplement clinicians' discussions and facilitate difficult preference-sensitive decisions. They are the gold standard approach (recommended by the Australian Commission of Safety and Quality in Healthcare) to facilitate complex healthcare decisions where there is more than one reasonable choice and where patients may value benefits and risks differently.
Locations (1)
Murdoch Children's Research Institute
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia