Cancer-related cognitive impairment is frequently reported by patients with breast cancer after chemotherapy. These difficulties can hinder return to work. It is therefore particularly important to assess and manage these impairments, especially to facilitate employment. We propose the Cog-VR pilot study to assess patient adherence to a virtual reality (VR)-based cognitive rehabilitation programme to support employment.
This prospective interventional pilot study aims to assess adherence to a VR-based cognitive rehabilitation programme in patients with breast cancer (n=23) treated by chemotherapy reporting cognitive complaints following cancer and its treatments. The programme consists of six weekly individual sessions (1 hour/week), including cognitive training, psychoeducation and VR immersion (10–15 min). VR tasks train executive functions, attention, memory and processing speed. The primary endpoint is the programme adherence, defined as completing at least five out of six VR sessions, each lasting a minimum of 5 min. The main secondary endpoints are objective cognitive tests and patient-reported outcomes (subjective cognitive functioning (Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy—Cognitive Scale), anxiety/depression (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale) and fatigue (Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy—Fatigue)) assessed before and after the programme. Furthermore, cyber sickness (Simulator Sickness Questionnaire) at each session, VR usability (System Usability Scale—third session) and patient satisfaction to the programme will also be assessed.
The study was approved by the local ethics committee (French Ouest II personal protection committee no. ID RCB: 2023-A02163-42) on January 2024. It was validated by the review board of the participating center. An individual participant data-sharing statement is not planned. Written informed consent will be obtained from all patients before any study procedure. The results of this pilot study will be disseminated through peer-reviewed journals and conference presentations.
The standard treatment of oral cavity cancers (OCC) relies on surgery and postoperative radiotherapy (poRT) for advanced stages or poor factors. In more than 75% of cases, reconstructive surgery with a flap aims to restore the function lost with tumour resection. Current poRT planning and delineation guidelines omit the presence of a flap. It may be assumed that poRT with flap sparing may allow for reducing radio-induced toxicities and improving functional outcomes, without impairing local primary control. The OPTIFLAP trial assesses non-inferior locoregional control using flap sparing compared with conventional flap-agnostic radiotherapy in patients with OCC, while reducing treatment-related toxicity and improving functional outcomes.
The OPTIFLAP study is a French, multicentre, 1:1 randomised, phase III, controlled trial. It will recruit 348 patients with OCC with a flap. Recruitment is active with the first enrolment on 2 July 2025 and is planned over 48 months. The primary outcome is non-inferior 2-year locoregional control rate using flap sparing compared with flap-agnostic radiotherapy (as per standard routine practice) in completely resected OCCs undergoing poRT. Key secondary outcomes include rates of toxicities, locoregional relapse-free survival, progression-free survival, overall survival, quality of life, functional outcomes (assessed by the Performance Status Scales for Head and Neck Cancer, the MD Anderson Dysphagia Inventory (self-questionnaire) and the Phonation Handicap Index (self-questionnaire)), flap doses and outcomes between arms depending on dosimetric parameters. The trial incorporates translational ancillary studies addressing individual radiosensitivity, salivary microbiome evolution, radiomics and dosiomics of flap changes, as well as medico-economic evaluation.
The study protocol has been approved by the Medical Ethics Committee East III (January 2025; Ref 24.05832.000442) and the French Agency for Medical and Health Products Safety (December 2024; ID-RCB: 2024-A01764-43) and was validated by review boards of all participating centres. Written informed consent will be obtained from all participants. Study results will be published in international peer-reviewed scientific journals and presented at relevant scientific conferences.