June 02, 2017
6 min read
Save

Web-based stress management program improves quality of life for patients with cancer

You've successfully added to your alerts. You will receive an email when new content is published.

Click Here to Manage Email Alerts

We were unable to process your request. Please try again later. If you continue to have this issue please contact customerservice@slackinc.com.

CHICAGO — An 8-week, web-based stress management program improved quality of life and relieved the distress of patients with cancer, according to a prospective study presented at the ASCO Annual Meeting.

“Diagnosis of cancer elicits high levels of distress which negatively affect physical and mental health,” Viviane Hess, MD, medical oncologist at University Hospital of Basel in Switzerland, said during a press conference. “Distress can lead to diminished treatment and tolerance [to treatment]. From randomized controlled trials, we know cognitive behavior therapies are effective in patients in distress. However, the majority of patients with cancer lack psychological support due to barriers on the patients’ side and a lack of resources on the providers’ side. With this online intervention, we aim to close this gap.”

According to a 2012 study by Mehnert and colleagues, one in every two patients with cancer experiences clinically relevant psychosocial distress that can erode quality of life and negatively affect the course of disease and a patient’s ability to tolerate treatment.

Remote therapy — known as therapist-guided online intervention — is becoming a standard approach for psychological disorders and appears to be as effective as traditional face-to-face therapy. Hess noted that 70% of patients with cancer use the internet, primarily to seek information. Remote therapy requires less time for therapists and is more convenient for patients facing many other medical appointments following diagnosis, according to the researchers.

“New technologies open new opportunities,” Hess said in a press release. “With this intervention we can deliver much needed psychological support in the comfort of the patients’ living rooms or other favorite Wi-Fi spots. It seems that patients and psychologists can still form a therapeutic bond through this online contact.”

The analysis included 129 patients (84% women; median age, 52 years) from Germany, Switzerland and Austria diagnosed with cancer within the past 12 weeks. Most received chemotherapy (58%) in a curative setting (91%), and the majority had early-stage breast cancer (71%). Other cancers included lung, ovarian, gastrointestinal, lymphoma and melanoma.

Researchers assigned patients to either an 8-week STREAM intervention developed by Swiss oncologists and psychologists, or a wait-list control group.

Each week, patients in the intervention group received written and audio information on topics such as bodily reaction to stress, cognitive stress reduction, feelings and social interactions, as well as exercises and questionnaires to complete. Psychologists reviewed patients’ progress weekly and provided personalized, written guidance and support through a secure online portal. Intervention patients also had the opportunity to write to the psychologists directly through the online program.

PAGE BREAK

Patients in the wait-list control group received psychological support 2 months after enrollment.

Researchers used validated scales to measure quality of life, distress and anxiety/depression at study entry and 2 months after intervention.

At baseline, 75% of patients self-reported distress above 4 on a 10-point scale.

 

Don S. Dizon

 

At 2 months, distress scores in the intervention group dropped from a median score of 6 at the start of study to 4 (P = .032) after 2 months of counseling, whereas they remained at 6 for the control group.

Also, patients who participated in the stress management program scored 8.59 points higher (P = .044) than those without intervention in quality-of-life assessments. Median quality-of-life scores were 101 at baseline and 119 at 2 months for the intervention group compared with 108.3 at baseline and 109.5 in the control group.

Researchers observed no significant differences in anxiety and depression between the two groups.

“Our online stress management program is feasible for patients during and after treatment,” Hess said during the press conference. “Three in four patients were highly distressed and we reached a target population in need of support. The therapist-guided online program significantly improved quality of life and lowered distress.”

STREAM intervention is available only in Germany; researchers plan on making it accessible to more psychologists and patients in North America.

“Online psychological support will be much more important in the years to come, as the digital generation reaches the age when they are at higher risk for cancer,” Hess said. “For them, it will be natural to use such online tools and communicate without face-to-face interactions, so now is the time to standardize and validate the tools.”

A new diagnosis of cancer can bring on a wave of emotions, including fear and uncertainty, and cancer care must be paired with high-quality psychological support, Don S. Dizon, MD, FACP, clinical co-director of gynecologic oncology at Massachusetts General Hospital, who was not involved in the study, said during the press conference.

“Most oncologists, when meeting patients for the first time and striving for curative intent therapy, assume there is a level of distress people have,” Dizon said. “But we assume that level of distress will fall naturally as we start them on therapy. This study shows three out of four patients not only have distress, but significant distress. Trying to get these patients support can be an issue because they are at our cancer centers quite frequently for medical therapy, and trying to squeeze psychological expertise into treatment plans can become difficult. Utilizing an online system has not only shown to be sensible, but the promise of being effective as well.”

Richard L. Schilsky

The recent news that singer and actress Olivia Newtown-John had a recurrence of breast cancer after 25 years in remission sheds light on the distress cancer survivors live with on a daily basis, ASCO chief medical officer Richard L. Schilsky, MD, FASCO, said.

“To a great extent, for a cancer patient, every day is another unknown, and those unknowns create a lot of anxiety,” Schilsky said. “Concerns about what lies ahead in the cancer journey and how that impacts patients in their quality of life and how they cope with those concerns effectively is really a lifelong issue for those patients.” – by Chuck Gormley

References:

Hess V, et al. Abstract LBA10002. Presented at: ASCO Annual Meeting; June 2-6, 2017; Chicago.

Mehnert A, et al. BMC Psychiatry. 2012;doi:10.1186/1471-244X-12-70.

Disclosures: Hess reports travel expenses from CSL Behring. Please see the abstract for all other researchers’ relevant financial disclosures.