For the NSW Cancer Council Cancer Education Research Program
Affiliations of authors: S. A. Newell, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia, Health Promotion Unit, Northern Rivers Area Health Service, Lismore, New South Wales, and Southern Cross University, Lismore; R. W. Sanson-Fisher, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Newcastle; N. J. Savolainen, Commonwealth Grants Commission, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory.
Correspondence to: The Secretary, NSW Cancer Council Cancer Education Research Program, Locked Bag 10, WALLSEND, NSW, 2287 (e-mail: sallien{at}nrhs.health.nsw.gov.au).
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ABSTRACT |
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INTRODUCTION |
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Despite these high expectations, patients appear highly satisfied with their experiences with psychological therapies. In the one trial allowing comparisons, all patients using psychological therapies reported that they would use them again and would recommend them to other cancer patients. In comparison, 20% of patients using other nontraditional therapies reported that they would neither use the therapy again nor recommend it (7). Despite self-identified knowledge limitations, most oncologists also report having relatively positive attitudes about recommending these therapies for cancer patients (1517).
Previous reviews of the literature have indicated that psychological therapies may help cancer patients by increasing their knowledge about their disease and treatment (1820); by improving their emotional adjustment, quality of life, and coping skills (1822); by improving their satisfaction with care (21,22); by improving their physical health and functional adjustment (1820,22); by reducing treatment-related, disease-related, and conditioned symptoms (19,2123); by increasing patients' compliance with traditional treatments (21); by improving immune system indicators (18); and by increasing the length of survival or time to recurrence (18). These reviews, however, lacked methodologic rigor in that only one excluded nonrandomized trials (22) and, although some discussed the methodologic limitations of the included trials (20,21,23), none excluded methodologically inadequate studies or provided separate summaries for the methodologically adequate studies. Therefore, despite the consistent conclusions reached by those reviews, we considered those reviews unlikely to convince cancer centers to incorporate psychological therapies into standard treatment protocols. Furthermore, recent articles in leading medical journals (2426) have highlighted the need for objective and scientific evaluations, as opposed to blind dismissals, of nontraditional therapies.
Consequently, we perceived a need to conduct a more critical review of this literature to identify areas where consistent evidence exists regarding the effectiveness of psychological therapies at reducing cancer patients' morbidity and mortality, as well as areas in which further research is required. By identifying methodologic shortfalls in the existing literature, we also aimed to make recommendations to improve the design of future studies in this area. As this literature spans more than 40 years, this review also explored the change over time in the types of papers published and in the methodologic quality of the intervention studies.
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METHOD |
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Search Strategy and Data Sources (Literature Overview and Effectiveness Review)
We used multiple techniques to locate as many relevant papers as possible. First, we conducted an extensive search of the published literature through December 1998 on the MEDLINE®, Psychlit®, Healthplan®, and Allied and Complementary Medicine® databases using the following search terms (cancer OR neoplas* OR oncolog*) AND (relax* OR hypno* OR meditat* OR desensitis* OR desensitiz* OR imagery OR stress-psychological OR counsel* OR group therap* OR psychosoc* interven* OR psychotherapy OR psycholog* OR psychosoc* OR cognitive therapy OR behav* therapy OR self-help-groups OR support group* OR family therapy OR depressive disorder therapy), where * represents wildcard characters. Second, we searched the bibliographies of all located, relevant papers for additional potentially relevant references. This process was performed iteratively until no new potentially relevant references were identified. Third, we contacted relevant research groups within the Cochrane Collaboration and other key authors known or suggested by others to locate relevant but currently unpublished studies.
Paper Selection and Classification (Literature Overview and Effectiveness Review)
For inclusion in this review, papers had to be written in English and discuss any psychological therapy in relation to cancer patients. As indicated by the search terms employed, we used a very broad notion of what constitutes psychological therapy to maximize the chance of including all relevant papers. Eligible papers were coded by their year of publication (pre-1980, 1980s, or 1990s) and were classified into one of the following categories: 1) measures papers (primary data source papers describing the development or evaluation of the acceptability, economic, or psychometric properties of measures [e.g., survey instruments] relating to psychological therapies among cancer patients); 2) descriptive papers (primary data source papers describing the prevalence or predictors of use of psychological therapies among cancer patients); 3) intervention studies (primary data source papers, of any experimental design, that evaluate the effectiveness of psychological therapies among cancer patients); 4) reviews (secondary data source papers stating, at least, the databases and time periods searched, that provided systematic reviews of the literature regarding any aspect of psychological therapies among cancer patients; and 5) commentaries (other papers including letters, editorials, descriptions of psychological interventions or studies still to be conducted, and nonsystematic literature reviews with inadequate search strategy description).
Paper Selection and Classification (Effectiveness Review Only)
For inclusion in the effectiveness review stage of this review, papers had to discuss the results of a randomized, controlled trial that evaluated the effectiveness of a psychological intervention in improving cancer patients' psychosocial, side-effect, immune, or survival outcomes.
Data Extraction: Intervention Study Characteristics (Literature Overview and Effectiveness Review)
Data were extracted from each intervention study about the sex, age, disease, and treatment characteristics of the patient group targeted, the nature of the psychological therapies investigated, the nature of the outcome measures assessed, the length of follow-up, and the study design. For papers that included results from two or more separate intervention studies (2733), each study was coded as a separate "trial," the term used throughout this review to indicate the total number of studies and substudies included in each "Results" section. Similarly, where multiple intervention arms were compared with one control arm in a single study, each intervention arm was coded, against the control, as a separate trial (3470). Consequently, the number of references that are cited for any given statement might be less than the number of trials that are reported.
Data Extraction: Methodologic Quality of Randomized, Controlled Trials (Literature Overview and Effectiveness Review)
Although many scales of various lengths and complexities exist to assess the methodologic quality of a trial, there is little evidence that such scales improve the validity of reviews' conclusions. Consequently, the Cochrane Collaboration (71) recommends that quality assessments of randomized trials concentrate on whether potential threats to a trial's internal validity have been adequately controlled. Therefore, we rated each randomized, controlled trial against 10 indicators of internal validity, as recommended by the Cochrane Collaboration (71) and the New South Wales Health Department (72). According to Cochrane Collaboration Handbook guidelines (71), each trial was classified as having entirely fulfilled, mostly fulfilled, mostly not fulfilled, or not at all fulfilled each indicator or as providing insufficient information for adequate assessment. Table 1 summarizes the 10 methodologic quality indicators and the classification criteria that we used for each.
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We assigned an overall methodologic quality rating (to determine eligibility for the effectiveness review) to each trial by converting the above classifications into scores by use of the following criteria: A trial received 3 points for each indicator entirely fulfilled, 2 points for each mostly fulfilled, 1 point for each mostly not fulfilled, and 0 points for each indicator not at all fulfilled or with insufficient information for assessment. Consequently, each trial could achieve a maximum total score of 30 points. The quality of a trial was considered to be good if the trial had a total score greater than 20 points, fair if it scored 1120 points, and poor if it scored less than 11 points.
Data Extraction: Trial Results (Effectiveness Review Only)
We extracted data on patient groups targeted, samples achieved, length of follow-up periods, and each strategy's nature and effectiveness from good- and fair-quality trials only. For trials in which the control groups received part of the treatments given to the intervention groups, we assessed only the effectiveness of the additional treatment strategies received by the intervention groups. To allow the comparison of outcomes across different trials, we grouped the measured outcomes into the following categories: 1) psychosocial outcomes (subdivided into patients' levels of anxiety, depression, other affect [including general or overall affect, hostility, and stress or distress], functional ability [including general or overall status or quality of life, coping or control skills, and vocational or domestic adjustment], and relationships [including interpersonal or social and sexual or marital relationships]); 2) side-effect outcomes (subdivided into patients' levels of nausea, vomiting, pain, fatigue, overall physical symptoms, conditioned nausea, and conditioned vomiting); and 3) survival and immune outcomes (subdivided into patients' lengths of survival and immune functions).
For trials that reported multiple interim outcome measures for patients receiving multisession psychological therapies, only the last set of such measurements was included and was labeled as immediately post-intervention. Each measure of each outcome was assessed as to whether each intervention group was statistically significantly better or worse than, or no different from, the control group. Where a measure was described as collected but no results were presented, we assumed that no statistically significant difference existed between the control and the intervention groups.
Data Extraction: Quality Assurance of Coding (Literature Overview and Effectiveness Review)
Two individuals were thoroughly trained by the first author in applying all classification systems, using detailed coding manuals and an iterative process, until all classifications were fully understood and consistently applied. The first 350 papers identified as being potentially eligible for inclusion in this review were independently coded by both coders as to their eligibility and classification. Approximately 10% (n = 25) of the papers that discussed intervention studies were randomly selected for double coding of their study characteristics and, where relevant, their methodologic quality classification.
Data Synthesis (Literature Overview Only)
Descriptive statistics were produced separately for each time period (pre-1980, 1980s, or 1990s) for all variables explored. Where relevant and appropriate, two-sided chi-square analyses were conducted to determine whether differences existed between the papers published during these three time periods. All analyses were conducted with SAS version 6.12 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC).
Data Synthesis (Effectiveness Review Only)
Wide variations in the nature of interventions, outcome measures, length of follow-up periods, and presentation of trials' results prohibited us from using meta-analysis to analyze this effectiveness review. We therefore used the decision process that we developed for a previous literature review to allow us to analyze the results to produce recommendations for or against each intervention strategy (73,74). Because many interventions involved multiple strategies, results were analyzed in relation to each outcome for each component intervention strategy across all trials that had incorporated that strategy into their intervention. For trials that used multiple measures of an outcome, we recorded an overall statistically significant result only when more than half of the measures were statistically significant.
Each analysis resulted in one of five outcomes: 1) a strong recommendation for the intervention strategy, 2) a tentative recommendation for it, 3) a tentative recommendation against it, 4) a strong recommendation against it, or 5) no recommendation for or against it. Strong recommendations for or against an intervention strategy were made only when at least three trials, including at least one trial of good methodologic quality, had investigated the strategy and found consistent results (at least 75% of trials with statistically significant results). Tentative recommendations for or against an intervention strategy were made when consistent evidence (at least 75% of trials with statistically significant results) from fair-quality trials was obtained. Inconsistent evidence produced no recommendation for or against an intervention strategy.
The follow-up periods in the reviewed trials ranged from immediately after the intervention to 18 months after the intervention. Therefore, for each outcome, we calculated an overall summary and summaries for the following four follow-up periods: 1) immediately after the intervention, 2) short-term (up to 1 month after the intervention), 3) medium-term (16 months after the intervention), and 4) long-term (>6 months after the intervention).
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RESULTS: LITERATURE OVERVIEW AND EFFECTIVENESS REVIEW |
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RESULTS: LITERATURE OVERVIEW STAGE |
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A total of 627 eligible papers were located, with the earliest published in 1954 (1,4,8,14,18,19,2123,2770,75648). Another 15 potentially eligible papers could not be located from the available references (see "Appendix"). The 627 eligible papers included four measures studies, 47 descriptive studies, 271 intervention studies involving 329 separate trials, 293 commentaries, and 12 reviews. The number of eligible papers published has steadily increased over time: Fifty relevant papers were published between 1954 and 1979, 274 were published in the 1980s, and 361 were published between 1990 and 1998. In each of these time periods, commentaries and intervention studies constituted the majority of the published papers.
Designs of Intervention Studies
Although the relative proportions of papers about intervention studies remained constant, the designs of these studies changed quite dramatically over time. The pre-1980 interventions were predominantly (70%) case studies with relatively few cohort studies and nonrandomized trials and no randomized trials. During the 1980s and 1990s, however, randomized, controlled trials became the preferred design for evaluating psychological therapies and represented 45% of such studies published in the 1980s and 55% of those published in the 1990s.
Characteristics of Participants in Intervention Studies
Table 2 summarizes the age, sex, cancer sites, disease stages, and concurrent traditional treatments of the patients who participated in the 329 intervention studies. Over time, the number of intervention studies that included both male and female patients increased, whereas the number of studies that only enrolled either patients of one sex or children decreased. Most of the studies enrolled patients who had cancers at any site, with breast cancer patients representing the most commonly specifically recruited patient group. Over time, the number of studies with samples composed of only patients with advanced disease decreased, and the number of studies with samples composed of patients with a range of disease stages increased.
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Table 1 summarizes how the 155 randomized, controlled trials performed on each methodologic quality indicator. Most trials either failed to fulfill most indicators or provided insufficient information for assessment. There was little improvement in the methodologic quality of the trials over time: We found no statistically significant differences in the percentages of trials fulfilling each indicator between trials conducted in the 1990s and those conducted in the 1980s.
The median methodologic quality score for the 155 randomized trials was 9 points (range = 021 points), which was less than a third of the maximum number of points possible. Only 60 (39%) trials had scores of 10 or more points (i.e., at least one third of the maximum possible points), and only nine (6%) trials had scores of 15 or more points. We believe that some of this poor performance may be attributable to inadequate reporting of the methods in many trials: Only five (3%) trials could be assessed on all 10 methodologic indicators, whereas 52 (34%) trials provided insufficient information for assessment on five or more indicators.
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RESULTS: EFFECTIVENESS REVIEW STAGE |
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We located 86 relevant papers that reported results from 129 trials with psychosocial outcomes (2729,3337,3944,4653,55,56,59,60,6264,66,69,70,7981,84,93,102,103,110,111, 114,117,123,124,149,154,156,169,170,173176,200,206,212,214,215,221,248,250252, 270,282,328,340,425,431,435,436,475,498,501,533,534,537,572, 577,579,581,637,638,641,643). We excluded 87 (67%) of those trials from this review because they produced poor methodologic quality scores (2729,3335,37,43,44,46,4852,55,56,59,60,62,64,66,69, 79,110,114,117,123,149,156,169,170,173176,200,206,212,214,215,221,248,250252,270,282,340,425,431,435, 475,498,501,533,577,579,637,638,641,643). Eight additional trials were excluded because the two papers in which they were reported did not present separate results for each trial (36,41). The remaining 34 trials explored interventions aimed at reducing patients' levels of anxiety (39,40,42,43,47,53,66,80,81,84,93,102,103,111,436,534,572,581) or depression (42,43,47,63,70,80,81,84,103,154,572) or other negative affect (39,42,43,47,53,59,63,70,80,81,93,102,103,111,124,154,328,537,572) or at improving the functional status of patients (43,47,63,70,80,81,103,124,154,328,572,581) or relationships of patients (43,63,70,80,84,103,124,154,572).
We located 57 relevant papers that reported results from 93 trials with physical side-effect outcomes (28,29,32,33,3638,4042,44,4648,5157,59,60,62,63,70,80,81,102,107,110,111,117,124,156,169,170,174,176,186,248,250,270,282,328,436,475,498,523,526,534,537,572,579,637,638,641). We excluded 57 (61%) of those trials from this review because they produced poor methodologic quality scores (28,29,32,33,37,38,44,46,48,51,52,5456,60,62,107,110,117,156,169,170,174,176,186,248,250,270,282,475,498,523,526,579,637,638,641). Eight additional trials were excluded because the two papers in which they were reported did not present separate results for each trial (36,41). The remaining 28 trials explored interventions aimed at reducing patients' levels of nausea (40,42,53,57,534), vomiting (42,53,534), pain (47,57,59,102,111,124,537), fatigue (47,63,81,328,572), or overall physical symptoms (53,70,80,436).
We located 10 relevant papers that reported results from 19 trials with conditioned side-effect outcomes (37,39,40,5355,61,107,173,174). We excluded nine (47%) of those trials from this review because they produced poor methodologic quality scores (37,54,55,107,173,174). The remaining 10 trials explored interventions aimed at reducing patients' conditioned nausea (39,40,53,61) and conditioned vomiting (39,53,61).
We located 12 relevant papers that reported results from 16 trials with survival or immune outcomes (30,41,63,66,91,92,154,536,539,580,639,640). We excluded three (19%) of those trials from this review because they produced poor methodologic quality scores (30,91,92). Three additional trials were excluded because the paper in which they were reported did not present separate results for each trial (41). The remaining 10 trials explored interventions aimed at improving patients' lengths of survival (154,580,639,640) or immune outcomes (63,66,536,539).
Effectiveness of Interventions Targeting Patient Anxiety
Table 3 summarizes the study samples, interventions, and results, by type of outcome, of the 18 papers that discussed one good-quality trial and 24 fair-quality trials that explored interventions aimed at reducing patients' levels of anxiety (39,40,42,43,47,53,66,80,81,84,93,102,103,111,436,534,572,581). Because some of the trials reported results for multiple follow-up points, we reviewed 39 separate sets of results, of which the data for 18 were collected immediately after the intervention, the data for 12 were collected at a short-term follow-up, the data for seven were collected at a medium-term follow-up, and the data for two were collected at a long-term follow-up. The overall results summarized in Table 4
suggest that music therapy can currently be tentatively recommended for reducing patients' anxiety levels, although this recommendation was based on results from only one trial (436). In addition, therapist-delivered interventions involving individual therapy, cognitive behavioral therapy, communication skills training, guided imagery, and self-practice of the intervention warrant further exploration before recommendations for or against their use can be made. The time-specific results from Table 5
show that tentative recommendations could be made for the long-term benefits of either structured or unstructured counseling and the short-term benefit of self-practice, although each of these recommendations was based on results from only one trial (66,84). In addition, individual therapy appeared to be worthy of future investigation in relation to its short-term and long-term benefits, whereas group therapy appeared to be worthy of future investigation in relation to its medium-term benefits.
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Table 3 summarizes the study samples, interventions, and results, by type of outcome, of the 11 papers that discussed 15 trials of fair quality that explored interventions aimed at reducing patients' levels of depression (42,43,47,63,70,80,81,84,103,154,572). Because some of these trials reported results from multiple follow-up points, we reviewed 24 sets of results, of which the data for seven were collected immediately after the intervention, the data for seven were collected at a short-term follow-up, the data for eight were collected at a medium-term follow-up, and the data for two were collected at a long-term follow-up. The overall results from Table 4
suggest that no intervention strategy can be recommended for reducing patients' levels of depression. However, interventions involving group therapy, education, structured counseling, cognitive behavioral therapy, communication skills training, and self-esteem building warrant further exploration before recommendations for or against their use can be made. The time-specific results from Table 5
show that tentative recommendations could be made for the medium-term benefit of group therapy (43,81) and for the long-term benefits of education and structured counseling (84), although the latter two recommendations were based on results from only one trial. In addition, interventions involving patients' significant others and self-practice appeared to be worthy of future investigation in relation to their short-term benefits, and relaxation training appeared to be worthy of future investigation for its medium-term benefits.
Effectiveness of Interventions Targeting General or Overall Affect
Table 3 summarizes the study samples, interventions, and results, by type of outcome, of the 17 papers that discussed one good-quality trial and 21 fair-quality trials that explored interventions aimed at improving patients' levels of general or overall affect (43,47,53,59,63,70,80,81,93,102,103,111,124,154,328,537,572). Because some of the trials reported results for multiple follow-up points, we reviewed 33 sets of results, of which the data for 11 were collected immediately after the intervention, the data for 12 were collected at a short-term follow-up, the data for eight were collected at a medium-term follow-up, and the data for two were collected at a long-term follow-up. The overall results from Table 4
suggest that unstructured counseling and music therapy can currently be tentatively recommended for improving patients' general affect levels, although the latter recommendation was based on results from only one trial (537). In addition, therapist-delivered interventions involving group therapy, education, structured counseling, cognitive behavioral therapy, and communication skills training warrant further exploration before recommendations for or against their use can be made. The time-specific results from Table 5
show that tentative recommendations could also be made for the long-term benefits of therapist-delivered, individual interventions involving education, structured and unstructured counseling, cognitive behavioral therapy, and communication skills training (124,154), for the medium-term benefit of group therapy (43,81), and for the immediate benefits of interventions involving patients' significant others, education, and communication skills training (43,80,93).
Effectiveness of Interventions Targeting Hostility
Table 3 summarizes the study samples, interventions, and results, by type of outcome, of the six papers that discussed 10 fair-quality trials that explored interventions aimed at reducing patients' levels of hostility (39,42,47,63,81,572). Because some of the trials reported results for multiple follow-up points, we reviewed 14 sets of results, of which the data for five were collected immediately after the intervention, the data for four were collected at a short-term follow-up, and the data for five were collected at a medium-term follow-up. The overall results from Tables 4 and 5
suggest that no intervention strategy could be recommended for reduction of patients' hostility levels or for further exploration in relation to any time period.
Effectiveness of Interventions Targeting Stress or Distress
Table 3 summarizes the study samples, interventions, and results, by type of outcome, of the eight papers that discussed 11 fair-quality trials that explored interventions aimed at reducing patients' levels of stress or distress (43,47,63,70,80,102,103,328). Because some of these trials reported results from multiple follow-up points, we reviewed 15 sets of results, of which the data for five were collected immediately after the intervention, the data for five were collected at a short-term follow-up, and the data for five were collected at a medium-term follow-up. The overall results from Table 4
suggest that non-therapist-delivered interventions involving structured counseling can currently be tentatively recommended for reducing patients' levels of stress or distress. In addition, interventions involving patients' significant others, cognitive behavioral therapy, communication skills training, and self-esteem building warrant further exploration before recommendations for or against their use can be made. The time-specific results from Table 5
show that tentative recommendations could also be made for the medium-term benefits of interventions involving group therapy, cognitive behavioral therapy, and communication skills training (43,80). All of the other strategies examined, except self-practice, appeared worthy of further investigation in relation to either their short-term or medium-term benefits. No strategy, however, showed any benefits in reducing patients' stress levels immediately after the intervention was given.
Effectiveness of Interventions Targeting General or Overall Functional Ability or Quality of Life
Table 3 summarizes the study samples, interventions, and results, by type of outcome, of the seven papers that discussed nine fair-quality trials that explored interventions aimed at improving patients' levels of general functional ability or quality of life (43,47,63,80,124,154,581). Because some of these trials reported results from multiple follow-up points, we reviewed 11 sets of results, of which the data for five were collected immediately after the intervention, the data for two were collected at a short-term follow-up, the data for two were collected at a medium-term follow-up, and the data for two were collected at a long-term follow-up. The overall results from Table 4
suggest that interventions involving structured or unstructured counseling and guided imagery can currently be tentatively recommended for improving patients' general functional ability or quality of life (47,124,154). In addition, therapist-delivered, individual interventions involving patients' significant others, education, relaxation training, cognitive behavioral therapy, and communication skills training warrant further exploration before recommendations for or against their use can be made. The time-specific results from Table 5
show that most of the benefits resulting from these interventions were found at the medium- and long-term follow-up periods (43,80,124,154).
Effectiveness of Interventions Targeting Coping or Control Skills
Table 3 summarizes the study samples, interventions, and results, by type of outcome, of the eight papers that discussed 10 fair-quality trials that explored interventions aimed at improving patients' coping or control skills (63,70,80,81,103,328,572,581). Because some of these trials reported results from multiple follow-up points, we reviewed 17 sets of results, of which the data for three were collected immediately after the intervention, the data for seven were collected at a short-term follow-up, and the data for seven were collected at a medium-term follow-up. The overall results from Table 4
suggest that group therapy can currently be tentatively recommended for improving patients' coping or control skills and that interventions involving relaxation training, cognitive behavioral therapy, and communication skills training warrant further exploration before recommendations for or against their use can be made. The time-specific results from Table 5
show that most of the benefits for these interventions were found immediately after the intervention was given (80,81). No trials explored the long-term effects of these interventions. Only group therapy could be tentatively recommended for its medium-term benefits (81), although the medium-term benefits of cognitive behavioral therapy and the short-term benefits of self-esteem building warrant further exploration before recommendations for or against their use can be made.
Effectiveness of Interventions Targeting Vocational or Domestic Adjustment
Table 3 summarizes the study samples, interventions, and results, by type of outcome, of the four papers that discussed five fair-quality trials that explored interventions aimed at improving patients' vocational or domestic adjustment (43,70,80,124). Because some of these trials reported results from multiple follow-up points, we reviewed nine sets of results, of which the data for two were collected immediately after the intervention, the data for two were collected at a short-term follow-up, the data for four were collected at a medium-term follow-up, and the data for one were collected at a long-term follow-up. The overall results from Tables 4 and 5
suggest that none of these intervention strategies could be recommended either for improving patients' vocational or domestic adjustment or for further investigation.
Effectiveness of Interventions Targeting Interpersonal or Social Relationships
Table 3 summarizes the study samples, interventions, and results, by type of outcome, of the seven papers that discussed nine fair-quality trials that explored interventions aimed at improving patients' interpersonal or social relationships (43,63,70,80,124,154,572). Because some of these trials reported results from multiple follow-up points, we reviewed 14 sets of results, of which the data for two were collected immediately after the intervention, the data for four were collected at a short-term follow-up, the data for six were collected at a medium-term follow-up, and the data for two were collected at a long-term follow-up. The overall results from Table 4
suggest that either structured or unstructured counseling can currently be tentatively recommended for improving patients' interpersonal or social relationships (124,154). The time-specific results from Table 5
show that most of the benefits were found in trials that explored the long-term effects of these interventions (124,154). We were unable to recommend the use or further investigation of any of the intervention strategies for benefits in any of the other time periods.
Effectiveness of Interventions Targeting Sexual or Marital Relationships
Table 3 summarizes the study samples, interventions, and results, by type of outcome, of the five papers that discussed six fair-quality trials that explored interventions aimed at improving patients' sexual or marital relationships (43,70,80,84,103). Because some of these trials reported results from multiple follow-up points, we reviewed 11 sets of results, of which the data for two were collected immediately after the intervention, the data for three were collected at a short-term follow-up, the data for five were collected at a medium-term follow-up, and the data for one were collected at a long-term follow-up. The overall results from Table 4
suggest that no intervention strategy could be recommended for improving patients' sexual or marital relationships. Therapist-delivered, individual interventions involving education and counseling, however, warrant further exploration before recommendations for or against their use can be made. The time-specific results from Table 5
show that tentative recommendations could be made for the long-term benefit of such strategies, although these recommendations were based on results from only one trial (84).
Effectiveness of Interventions Targeting Nausea
Table 6 summarizes the study samples, interventions, and results, by type of outcome, of the five papers that discussed 12 fair-quality trials that explored interventions aimed at reducing patients' nausea (40,42,53,57,534). Because some of these trials reported results from multiple follow-up points, we reviewed 22 sets of results, of which the data for eight were collected immediately after the intervention, the data for 11 were collected at a short-term follow-up, and the data for three were collected at a medium-term follow-up. The overall results from Table 4
suggest that no intervention strategy could be recommended for reducing patients' nausea. Therapist-delivered interventions involving individual therapy, unstructured counseling, relaxation training, and self-practice, however, warrant further exploration before recommendations for or against their use can be made. The time-specific results from Table 5
show that tentative recommendations could be made for the medium-term benefits of relaxation and guided imagery, although the latter recommendation was based on results from only one trial (40).
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Table 6 summarizes the study samples, interventions, and results, by type of outcome, of the three papers that discussed six fair-quality trials that explored interventions aimed at reducing patients' vomiting (42,53,534). Because some of these trials reported results from multiple follow-up points, we reviewed 16 sets of results, of which the data for five were collected immediately after the intervention and the data for 11 were collected at a short-term follow-up. The overall results from Tables 4 and 5
indicate that no intervention strategy could be recommended for reducing patients' vomiting in either follow-up period.
Effectiveness of Interventions Targeting Pain
Table 6 summarizes the study samples, interventions, and results, by type of outcome, of the seven papers that discussed 10 fair-quality trials exploring interventions aimed at reducing patients' pain (47,57,59,102,111,124,537). Because some of these trials reported results from multiple follow-up points, we reviewed 10 sets of results, of which the data for seven were collected immediately after the intervention, the data for two were collected at a short-term follow-up, and the data for one were collected at a long-term follow-up. The overall results from Table 4
suggest that no intervention strategy could be recommended for reducing patients' pain. Interventions involving individual therapy, audiotape delivery, relaxation training, cognitive behavioral therapy, and self-practice, however, warrant further exploration before recommendations for or against their use can be made. The time-specific results from Table 5
show that all of the benefits of these strategies were seen immediately after the intervention or in the short-term follow-up; however, it was still not possible to make any tentative recommendations for any of the intervention strategies.
Effectiveness of Interventions Targeting Fatigue
Table 6 summarizes the study samples, interventions, and results, by type of outcome, of the five papers that discussed seven fair-quality trials that explored interventions aimed at reducing patients' fatigue (47,63,81,328,572). Because some of these trials reported results from multiple follow-up points, we reviewed 11 sets of results, of which the data for three were collected immediately after the intervention, the data for four were collected at a short-term follow-up, and the data for four were collected at a medium-term follow-up. The overall results from Table 4
suggest that no intervention strategy could be recommended for reducing patients' fatigue or for further exploration. However, Table 5
shows that tentative recommendations could be made for the medium-term benefits of interventions involving group therapy and cognitive behavioral therapy, although each was based on results from only one trial (81).
Effectiveness of Interventions Targeting Overall Physical Symptoms
Table 6 summarizes the study samples, interventions, and results, by type of outcome, of the four papers that discussed seven fair-quality trials that explored interventions aimed at reducing patients' overall physical symptoms (53,70,80,436). Because some of these trials reported results from multiple follow-up points, we reviewed 13 sets of results, of which the data for four were collected immediately after the intervention, the data for six were collected at a short-term follow-up, and the data for three were collected at a medium-term follow-up. The overall results from Table 4
suggest that, although no intervention strategy could be recommended for reducing patients' overall physical symptoms, guided imagery warrants further exploration before recommendations for or against it can be made.
Effectiveness of Interventions Targeting Conditioned Nausea
Table 6 summarizes the study samples, interventions, and results, by type of outcome, of the four papers that discussed 10 fair-quality trials that explored interventions aimed at reducing patients' conditioned nausea (39,40,53,61). Because some of these trials reported results from multiple follow-up points, we reviewed 10 sets of results, of which the data for two were collected immediately after the intervention, the data for three were collected at a short-term follow-up, and the data for five were collected at a medium-term follow-up. The overall results from Table 4
suggest that interventions involving self-practice and hypnosis can currently be tentatively recommended for reducing patients' conditioned nausea, although each recommendation was based on results from only one trial (61). In addition, therapist-delivered interventions involving individual therapy, unstructured counseling, relaxation training, and guided imagery warrant further exploration before recommendations for or against their use can be made. The time-specific results from Table 5
show that most of the benefits of these strategies were found immediately after the intervention or in the medium term, allowing us to make tentative recommendations for all of the intervention strategies in the immediate follow-up period (61) and for guided imagery in the medium term (39,40). In addition, therapist-delivered interventions involving individual therapy and cognitive behavioral therapy warrant further exploration before recommendations for or against their use can be made in relation to their medium-term benefits.
Effectiveness of Interventions Targeting Conditioned Vomiting
Table 6 summarizes the study samples, interventions, and results, by type of outcome, of the three papers that discussed seven fair-quality trials that explored interventions aimed at reducing patients' conditioned vomiting (39,53,61). Because some of these trials reported results from multiple follow-up points, we reviewed seven sets of results, of which the data for two were collected immediately after the intervention, the data for three were collected at a short-term follow-up, and the data for two were collected at a medium-term follow-up. The overall results from Table 4
suggest that interventions involving self-practice and hypnosis can currently be tentatively recommended for reducing patients' conditioned vomiting, although each recommendation was based on results from only one trial (61). In addition, therapist-delivered interventions involving individual therapy, relaxation training, and guided imagery warrant further exploration before recommendations for or against their use can be made. The time-specific results from Table 5
show that all of the benefits were found immediately after the intervention or at the medium-term follow-up (39,61), allowing us to make tentative recommendations for the immediate benefit of interventions involving relaxation training, guided imagery, self-practice, and hypnosis (61) and for the medium-term benefits of relaxation training and guided imagery. Each of these recommendations, however, was based on results from only one trial.
Effectiveness of Interventions Targeting Survival
Table 7 summarizes the study samples, interventions, and results, by type of outcome, of the four papers that discussed four fair-quality trials that explored interventions aimed at increasing patients' lengths of survival (154,580,639,640). Each of these trials involved a single, long-term follow-up point: one at 12 months after the intervention (154) and three at 56 years after the intervention (580,639,640). The overall results from Tables 4 and 5
suggest that no intervention strategy could be recommended for increasing patients' survival. Interventions involving group therapy, education, and relaxation training, however, warrant further exploration before recommendations for or against their use can be made.
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Table 7 summarizes the study samples, interventions, and results, by type of outcome, of the four papers that discussed six fair-quality trials exploring interventions aimed at improving patients' immune outcomes (63,66,536,539). Because some of these trials reported results from multiple follow-up points, we reviewed nine sets of results, of which the data for three were collected immediately after the intervention, the data for three were collected at a short-term follow-up, the data for one were collected at a medium-term follow-up, and the data for two were collected at a long-term follow-up. The overall results from Table 4
suggest that no intervention strategy could be recommended for improving patients' immune outcomes. Therapist-delivered interventions involving individual therapy, education, relaxation training, cognitive behavioral therapy, guided imagery, and electromyography feedback, however, warrant further exploration before recommendations for or against their use can be made. The time-specific results from Table 5
show that all of the benefits were seen in the medium- or long-term follow-up periods, allowing us to make tentative recommendations for all intervention strategies examined during these follow-up periods. These recommendations, however, should be treated with caution because many were based on results from only one trial (66,536).
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DISCUSSION |
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We identified a growing body of literature that explored the effectiveness of psychological therapies for cancer patients. Despite the increased use of randomized, controlled trial designs over time, the methodologic quality of most of the trials that we reviewed was less than optimal. Many of the trials, however, failed to provide sufficient information for us to assess their performance on many of the methodologic indicators. Therefore, it is possible, although unlikely, that some trials could have achieved higher methodologic quality scores than they did had more information been available. Table 8 shows how easily the 10 indicators of methodologic quality can be achieved (with the exception of indicator 4 for therapist-delivered interventions) and adequately reported to maximize the internal validity and improve the reporting of randomized trials of psychological therapies. The latter is important, given the increasing number of systematic reviews of literature in this field of research and the weight given to such reviews in developing clinical guidelines and best-practice models of care.
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Effectiveness Review
This stage of the review aimed to critically summarize the evidence about the effectiveness of specific psychological intervention strategies in improving the outcomes of cancer patients. Unfortunately, despite the large number of randomized, controlled trials located, a number of limitations within the trials themselves hampered our ability to make strong recommendations about any of the intervention strategies.
First, the overall methodologic quality of the trials that we located was poor; the majority of the trials were excluded for being of poor methodologic quality and only one trial achieved a good-quality rating (93). While it could be argued that the quality-assessment criteria that we used should be reviewed in the light of such poor performances by so many trials, the indicators used represented only a basic assessment of the internal validity of each trial according to Cochrane Collaboration Handbook (71) recommendations. Therefore, we believe that our results indicate genuine weaknesses in the design and reporting of trials of psychological therapies for cancer patients. Second, the reviewed trials tended to employ very small samples, with the vast majority having fewer than 50 patients per experimental group. Small study samples increase the likelihood of making type II errors, unless large improvements in outcomes are achieved in the intervention groups. Third, the reviewed trials tended to employ relatively short follow-up periods, with few having follow-up periods greater than 6 months, which prohibited us from commenting on the long-term effectiveness of many of the intervention strategies.
Overview of Effectiveness Review Findings
Although this is one of the more extensive and rigorous literature reviews conducted in this area of research, we can offer only tentative recommendations for or against most intervention strategies overall or within the different follow-up periods. In addition, it is important to note that most of these recommendations are based on results obtained from only one or two fair-quality trials. Therefore, the future publication of any fair- or good-quality trials that show no statistically significant benefit for any of these tentatively recommended strategies would negate the recommendation. Thus, these recommendations should be considered with appropriate caution and should not be seen as supporting the current wide-scale adoption of these strategies.
With this caution in mind, however, some intervention strategies appeared to provide potential benefits. For example, group therapy, education, structured and unstructured counseling, and cognitive behavioral therapy offered the most promise for their medium- and long-term benefits for many of the psychosocial outcomes explored. The comparative lack of immediate- and short-term benefits could suggest that psychological therapies are more likely to offer psychosocial benefits over the longer term. This finding, however, may well be only an artifact of the smaller number of trials that assessed the long-term effects of intervention strategies, whereby one statistically significant trial carries more weight in the synthesized data.
Although some intervention strategies could be tentatively recommended for reducing patients' conditioned side effects, very few intervention strategies could be recommended for reducing patients' physical side effects, despite the fact that more trials explored many of these outcomes. Of all the strategies investigated, relaxation training and guided imagery appeared to provide benefits for most of the side-effect outcomes explored.
Although no intervention strategies could be recommended for improving patients' lengths of survival, some tentative recommendations were possible in relation to immune outcomes, with all the strategies for which trials were performed indicating medium- or long-term immune benefits.
Comparison to Previous Reviews
Overall, the results of this review lead us to be considerably less enthusiastic about the likely benefits of psychological therapies for cancer patients than do the results of other recent reviews, many of which have recommended widespread and routine use of psychological therapies to improve patients' psychosocial, side-effect, survival, and immune outcomes. While we acknowledge that the small sample sizes in many of the reviewed trials increase the chance that we have underestimated the true effectiveness of psychological therapies, our cautious recommendations are considered to be warranted in light of the many other methodologic shortcomings of those trials.
Two other features of this review may have made it likely that we would find fewer statistically significant effects than previous reviews. First, some of the reviewed trials failed to present the data collected for all outcomes. In those cases, however, we assumed that authors were more likely to omit the statistically nonsignificant results than the statistically significant results from their papers. We considered this strategy, which does not appear to have been used in previous reviews, important for reducing the potential bias of relying only on presented results. Second, many of the reviewed trials employed multiple measures of the same outcome. In such cases, an overall statistically significant result was achieved only if more than half of the measures for that outcome were statistically significant. For example, a trial that reported two measures of patients' anxiety levels, one that showed a statistically significant benefit and one that did not, was coded as statistically nonsignificant overall. This conservative approach was considered warranted as a counterbalance to the fact that none of the reviewed trials appeared to adjust P values to compensate for frequent multiple comparisons, increasing the likelihood of obtaining statistically significant results due to chance.
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CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS FOR FUTURE RESEARCH |
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APPENDIX |
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NOTES |
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Supported by the NSW Cancer Council's Cancer Education Research Program.
The views expressed in this review are not necessarily those of the Cancer Council.
We gratefully acknowledge the work of Penny Youman and Anne Sullivan in coding the references.
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Manuscript received June 9, 1999; revised February 4, 2002; accepted February 14, 2002.
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