Department of Medical Psychology, Radboud University Medical Centre, Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
BMC Cancer. 2012 Sep 7;12:394. doi: 10.1186/1471-2407-12-394.
After completion of curative breast cancer treatment, patients go through a transition from patient to survivor. During this re-entry phase, patients are faced with a broad range of re-entry topics, concerning physical and emotional recovery, returning to work and fear of recurrence. Standard and easy-accessible care to facilitate this transition is lacking. In order to facilitate adjustment for all breast cancer patients after primary treatment, the BREATH intervention is aimed at 1) decreasing psychological distress, and 2) increasing empowerment, defined as patients' intra- and interpersonal strengths.
METHODS/DESIGN: The non-guided Internet-based self-management intervention is based on cognitive behavioural therapy techniques and covers four phases of recovery after breast cancer (Looking back; Emotional processing; Strengthening; Looking ahead). Each phase of the fully automated intervention has a fixed structure that targets consecutively psychoeducation, problems in everyday life, social environment, and empowerment. Working ingredients include Information (25 scripts), Assignment (48 tasks), Assessment (10 tests) and Video (39 clips extracted from recorded interviews). A non-blinded, multicentre randomised controlled, parallel-group, superiority trial will be conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of the BREATH intervention. In six hospitals in the Netherlands, a consecutive sample of 170 will be recruited of women who completed primary curative treatment for breast cancer within 4 months. Participants will be randomly allocated to receive either usual care or usual care plus access to the online BREATH intervention (1:1). Changes in self-report questionnaires from baseline to 4 (post-intervention), 6 and 10 months will be measured.
The BREATH intervention provides a psychological self-management approach to the disease management of breast cancer survivors. Innovative is the use of patients' own strengths as an explicit intervention target, which is hypothesized to serve as a buffer to prevent psychological distress in long-term survivorship. In case of proven (cost) effectiveness, the BREATH intervention can serve as a low-cost and easy-accessible intervention to facilitate emotional, physical and social recovery of all breast cancer survivors.
This study is registered at the Netherlands Trial Register (NTR2935).
在完成治愈性乳腺癌治疗后,患者会经历从患者到幸存者的转变。在这个重新进入的阶段,患者面临着广泛的重新进入主题,包括身体和情绪的恢复、重返工作岗位和对复发的恐惧。缺乏标准的、易于获得的护理来促进这种转变。为了促进所有乳腺癌患者在初次治疗后的调整,BREATH 干预旨在 1)降低心理困扰,2)增强权力感,定义为患者的内在和人际力量。
方法/设计:非引导式基于互联网的自我管理干预基于认知行为治疗技术,涵盖乳腺癌后康复的四个阶段(回顾过去;情绪处理;加强;展望未来)。完全自动化干预的每个阶段都有一个固定的结构,依次针对心理教育、日常生活中的问题、社会环境和赋权。工作成分包括信息(25 个脚本)、任务(48 个任务)、评估(10 个测试)和视频(从记录的访谈中提取的 39 个剪辑)。将进行一项非盲、多中心随机对照、平行组、优效性试验,以评估 BREATH 干预的有效性。在荷兰的六家医院,将连续招募 170 名在 4 个月内完成乳腺癌根治性治疗的女性作为参与者。参与者将被随机分配接受常规护理或常规护理加在线 BREATH 干预(1:1)。从基线到 4(干预后)、6 和 10 个月的自我报告问卷变化将被测量。
BREATH 干预为乳腺癌幸存者的疾病管理提供了一种心理自我管理方法。创新之处在于将患者自身的优势作为一个明确的干预目标,这被假设为作为缓冲,以防止长期生存中的心理困扰。如果证明(成本)有效,BREATH 干预可以作为一种低成本、易于获得的干预措施,促进所有乳腺癌幸存者的情绪、身体和社会恢复。
本研究在荷兰试验注册中心(NTR2935)注册。