Bradt Joke, Shim Minjung, Goodill Sherry W
Department of Creative Arts Therapies, College of Nursing and Health Professions, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA, USA
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015 Jan 7;1(1):CD007103. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007103.pub3.
Current cancer care increasingly incorporates psychosocial interventions. Cancer patients use dance/movement therapy to learn to accept and reconnect with their bodies, build new self-confidence, enhance self-expression, address feelings of isolation, depression, anger and fear and to strengthen personal resources.
To update the previously published review that examined the effects of dance/movement therapy and standard care versus standard care alone or standard care and other interventions on psychological and physical outcomes in patients with cancer.
We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) (The Cochrane Library 2014, Issue 6), MEDLINE (OvidSP, 1950 to June week 4, 2014), EMBASE (OvidSP, 1980 to 2014 week 26), CINAHL (EBSCOhost, 1982 to July 15 2014), PsycINFO (EBSCOhost, 1806 to July 15 2014), LILACS (Virual Health Library, 1982 to July 15 2014), Science Citation Index (ISI, 1974 to July 15 2014), CancerLit (1983 to 2003), International Bibliography of Theatre and Dance (1989 to July 15 2014), the National Research Register (2000 to September 2007), Proquest Digital Dissertations, ClinicalTrials.gov, and Current Controlled Trials (all to July 15 2014). We handsearched dance/movement therapy and related topics journals, reviewed reference lists and contacted experts. There was no language restriction.
We included all randomized and quasi-randomized controlled trials of dance/movement therapy interventions for improving psychological and physical outcomes in patients with cancer. We considered studies only if dance/movement therapy was provided by a formally trained dance/movement therapist or by trainees in a formal dance/movement therapy program.
Two review authors independently extracted the data and assessed the methodological quality, seeking additional information from the trial researchers when necessary. Results were presented using standardized mean differences.
We identified one new trial for inclusion in this update. In total, the evidence for this review rests on three studies with a total of 207 participants.We found no evidence for an effect of dance/movement therapy on depression (standardized mean difference (SMD) = 0.02, 95% confidence interval (CI) -0.28 to 0.32, P = 0.89, I2 = 0%) (two studies, N = 170), stress (SMD = -0.18, 95% CI -0.48 to 0.12, P = 0.24, I2 = 0%) (two studies, N = 170), anxiety (SMD = 0.21, 95% CI -0.09 to 0.51 P = 0.18, I2 = 0%) (two studies, N = 170), fatigue (SMD = -0.36, 95% -1.26 to 0.55, P = 0.44, I² = 80%) (two studies, N = 170) and body image (SMD = -0.13, 95% CI -0.61 to 0.34, P = 0.58, I2 = 0%) (two studies, N = 68) in women with breast cancer. The data of one study with moderate risk of bias suggested that dance/movement therapy had a large beneficial effect on 37 participants' quality of life (QoL) (SMD = 0.89, 95% CI 0.21 to 1.57). One study with a high risk of bias reported greater improvements in vigor and greater reduction in somatization in the dance/movement therapy group compared to a standard care control group (N = 31). The individual studies did not find support for an effect of dance/movement therapy on mood, mental health, and pain. It is unclear whether this was due to ineffectiveness of the treatment, inappropriate outcome measures or limited power of the trials. Finally, the results of one study did not find evidence for an effect of dance/movement therapy on shoulder range of motion (ROM) or arm circumference in 37 women who underwent a lumpectomy or breast surgery. However, this was likely due to large within-group variability for shoulder ROM and a limited number of participants with lymphedema.Two studies presented moderate risk of bias and one study high risk of bias. Therefore, overall, the quality of the evidence is very low.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: We did not find support for an effect of dance/movement therapy on depression, stress, anxiety, fatigue and body image . The findings of individual studies suggest that dance/movement therapy may have a beneficial effect on QoL, somatization, and vigor. However, the limited number of studies prevents us from drawing conclusions concerning the effects of dance/movement therapy on psychological and physical outcomes in cancer patients.
当前癌症护理越来越多地纳入心理社会干预措施。癌症患者采用舞蹈/运动疗法来学会接受并重新与自己的身体建立联系,树立新的自信,增强自我表达能力,应对孤独、抑郁、愤怒和恐惧情绪,并增强个人资源。
更新之前发表的综述,该综述探讨了舞蹈/运动疗法与标准护理相比,单独使用标准护理或标准护理与其他干预措施对癌症患者心理和身体结局的影响。
我们检索了Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)(《Cochrane图书馆》2014年第6期)、MEDLINE(OvidSP,1950年至2014年6月第4周)、EMBASE(OvidSP,1980年至2014年第26周)、CINAHL(EBSCOhost,1982年至2014年7月15日)、PsycINFO(EBSCOhost,1806年至2014年7月15日)、LILACS(虚拟健康图书馆,1982年至2014年7月15日)、科学引文索引(ISI,1974年至2014年7月15日)、CancerLit(1983年至2003年)、国际戏剧与舞蹈文献目录(1989年至2014年7月15日)、国家研究注册库(2000年至2007年9月)、Proquest数字学位论文、ClinicalTrials.gov以及当前对照试验(均截至2014年7月15日)。我们手工检索了舞蹈/运动疗法及相关主题期刊,查阅了参考文献列表并联系了专家。无语言限制。
我们纳入了所有关于舞蹈/运动疗法干预以改善癌症患者心理和身体结局的随机和半随机对照试验。仅当舞蹈/运动疗法由经过正规培训的舞蹈/运动治疗师或正规舞蹈/运动疗法项目的学员提供时,我们才考虑这些研究。
两位综述作者独立提取数据并评估方法学质量,必要时向试验研究者寻求更多信息。结果以标准化均数差值呈现。
我们确定了一项新试验纳入本次更新。总体而言,本综述的证据基于三项研究,共207名参与者。我们未发现舞蹈/运动疗法对乳腺癌女性的抑郁(标准化均数差值(SMD)=0.02,95%置信区间(CI)-0.28至0.32,P = 0.89,I² = 0%)(两项研究,N = 170)、压力(SMD = -0.18,95% CI -0.48至0.12,P = 0.24,I² = 0%)(两项研究,N = 170)、焦虑(SMD = 0.21,95% CI -0.09至0.51,P = 0.18,I² = 0%)(两项研究,N = 170)、疲劳(SMD = -0.36,95% -1.26至0.55,P = 0.44,I² = 80%)(两项研究,N = 170)和身体意象(SMD = -0.13,95% CI -0.61至0.34,P = 0.58,I² = 0%)(两项研究,N = 68)有影响的证据。一项存在中度偏倚风险的研究数据表明,舞蹈/运动疗法对37名参与者的生活质量(QoL)有很大益处(SMD = 0.89,95% CI 0.21至1.57)。一项存在高偏倚风险的研究报告称,与标准护理对照组相比,舞蹈/运动疗法组在活力方面有更大改善,在躯体化方面有更大降低(N = 31)。个别研究未发现舞蹈/运动疗法对情绪、心理健康和疼痛有影响的支持证据。尚不清楚这是由于治疗无效、结局测量不当还是试验效能有限。最后,一项研究的结果未发现舞蹈/运动疗法对37名接受肿块切除术或乳房手术的女性的肩部活动范围(ROM)或手臂周长有影响的证据。然而,这可能是由于肩部ROM组内变异性大以及淋巴水肿参与者数量有限。两项研究存在中度偏倚风险,一项研究存在高偏倚风险。因此,总体而言,证据质量非常低。
我们未发现舞蹈/运动疗法对抑郁、压力、焦虑、疲劳和身体意象有影响的支持证据。个别研究结果表明,舞蹈/运动疗法可能对生活质量、躯体化和活力有有益影响。然而,研究数量有限,使我们无法就舞蹈/运动疗法对癌症患者心理和身体结局的影响得出结论。