Investigator

Karla Gough

Principal Fellow [Quantitative Methodologist] · The University of Melbourne, Department of Nursing

KGKarla Gough
Papers(1)
ENhAncing Lifestyle B…
Collaborators(1)
Lara Edbrooke
Institutions(1)
Peter Maccallum Cance…

Papers

ENhAncing Lifestyle Behaviors in EndometriaL CancEr (ENABLE): A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial

Purpose: Endometrial cancer is associated with the highest comorbid disease burden of any cancer. The aim of this trial was to assess the feasibility and safety of an allied health intervention during adjuvant treatment. Methods: A mixed-methods pilot randomized (2:1) controlled trial with concealed allocation and assessor-blinding. Eligibility criteria: adjuvant endometrial cancer treatment scheduled, disease stage I-IIIC1, ECOG 0-2 and able to perform unsupervised physical activity (PA). Participants received usual care and 8 sessions of weekly, individualized, lifestyle education (diet and PA) with behavior change and social support (intervention group), delivered predominantly by telehealth, or usual care alone. Feasibility outcomes: recruitment and consent rates, decline reasons, program acceptability, intervention adherence and retention. Results: 22/44 eligible patients (50%, 95%CI: 36%, 64%) were recruited over 10 months (14 intervention, 8 usual care). The recruitment rate was 2.2 patients/month (95%CI: 1.4, 3.3). Patients who declined had too much going on (7/22, 32%) or were not interested (6/22, 27%). Mean (SD) age and BMI were 63.2 years (6.8) and 31.9 kg/m2 (6.7). A majority were FIGO stage I (15/22, 68%) and received vaginal brachytherapy (14/22, 64%). Adherence was high, 11/14 (79%, 95%CI: 52%, 92%) participants attended >70% of scheduled sessions. Retention was 100% (95%CI: 85%, 100%) at 9 weeks, however completion of objective measures was impacted by COVID-19 restrictions. Telehealth and online questionnaires enabled participation. No serious adverse events occurred. Conclusion: The intervention was acceptable to participants with high levels of adherence and retention. Trial findings will be used to design a future RCT. Trial registration: The trial was registered on www.anzctr.org.au (ACTRN12619000631101) 29/04/2019.

118Works
1Papers
1Collaborators

Positions

2025–

Principal Fellow [Quantitative Methodologist]

The University of Melbourne · Department of Nursing

2009–

Principal Research Fellow [Quantitative Methodologist]

Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre · Department of Health Services Research

2003–

Research Fellow [Quantitative Methodologist]

The University of Melbourne · Centre for Psychiatric Nursing

1998–

Quantitative Methodologist and Group Counsellor

Children's Protection Society · Sexual Abuse Counselling and Prevention Program

1997–

Quantitative Methodologist

The University of Melbourne · Centre for Palliative Care, Academic Nursing Unit

Education

2011

PhD (Psychological methodology, design and analysis)

The University of Melbourne · Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences

1998

Ba(Hons)

The University of Melbourne · Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences

Country

AU

Keywords
Quantitative psychologyHealth services researchPatient-reported outcomesPatterns of carePatient-centred outcomes researchComparative effectiveness researchQuantitative methodologist
Links & IDs
0000-0003-2819-4217LinkedIn

Scopus: 16303622400