Bannon Sarah, Lester Ethan G, Gates Melissa V, McCurley Jessica, Lin Ann, Rosand Jonathan, Vranceanu Ana-Maria
Integrated Brain Health Clinical and Research Program, Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, One Bowdoin Square, Suite 100, Boston, MA 02114 USA.
Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA USA.
Pilot Feasibility Stud. 2020 May 25;6:75. doi: 10.1186/s40814-020-00615-z. eCollection 2020.
A stroke is a sudden, life-altering event with potentially devastating consequences for survivors and their loved ones. Despite advances in endovascular and neurocritical care approaches to stroke treatment and recovery, there remains a considerable unmet need for interventions targeting the emotional impact of stroke for both patients and their informal caregivers. This is important because untreated emotional distress becomes chronic and negatively impacts quality of life in both patients and caregivers. Our team previously used mixed methods to iteratively develop a six-session modular dyadic intervention to prevent chronic emotional distress in patients with stroke and their informal caregivers called "Recovering Together" (RT) using feedback from dyads and the medical team. The aim of the current study is to test the feasibility of recruitment, acceptability of screening and randomization methods, acceptability of RT, satisfaction with RT, feasibility of the assessment process at all time points, and acceptability of outcome measures. Secondarily, we aimed to explore within-treatment effect sizes and change in clinically significant symptoms of depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress (PTS). The larger goal was to strengthen methodological rigor before a subsequent efficacy trial.
We conducted a feasibility randomized controlled trial to evaluate the RT intervention relative to minimally enhanced usual care (MEUC) in stroke patients admitted to a Neurosciences Intensive Care Unit (Neuro-ICU). Dyads were enrolled within 1 week of hospitalization if they met specific eligibility criteria. Assessments were done via paper and pencil at baseline, and electronically via REDCap or over the phone at post-intervention (approximately 6 weeks after baseline), and 3 months later. Assessments included demographics, resiliency intervention targets (mindfulness, coping, self-efficacy, and interpersonal bond), and emotional distress (depression, anxiety, and PTS). Primary outcomes were feasibility and acceptability markers. Secondary outcomes were depression, anxiety, PTS, mindfulness, coping, self-efficacy, and interpersonal bond.
We consented 20 dyads, enrolled 17, and retained 16. Although many patients were missed before we could approach them, very few declined to participate or dropped out once study staff made initial contact. Feasibility of enrollment (87% of eligible dyads enrolled), acceptability of screening, and randomization (all RT dyads retained after randomization) were excellent. Program satisfaction (RT post-test M = 11.33/12 for patients M = 12/12 for caregivers), and adherence to treatment sessions (six of seven RT dyads attending 4/6 sessions) were high. There were no technical difficulties that affected the delivery of the intervention. There was minimal missing data. For both patients and caregivers, participation in RT was generally associated with clinically significant improvement in emotional distress symptoms from baseline to post-test. Participation in MEUC was associated with clinically significant worsening in emotional distress. Although some of the improvement in emotional distress symptoms decreased in the RT group between post-test to 3 months, these changes were not clinically significant. RT was also associated with substantial decrease in frequency of individuals who met criteria for clinically significant symptoms, while the opposite was true for MEUC. There were many lessons that informed current and future research.
This study provided evidence of feasibility and signal of improvement in RT, as well as necessary methodological changes to increase recruitment efficiency before the future hybrid efficacy-effectiveness trial.
NCT02797509.
中风是一种突发的、改变生活的事件,对幸存者及其亲人可能产生毁灭性后果。尽管在中风治疗和康复的血管内治疗及神经重症护理方法方面取得了进展,但针对中风对患者及其非正式照料者的情感影响的干预措施仍有很大需求未得到满足。这一点很重要,因为未经治疗的情绪困扰会变成慢性问题,并对患者和照料者的生活质量产生负面影响。我们的团队此前使用混合方法,根据患者与照料者二元组以及医疗团队的反馈,反复开发了一种为期六节的模块化二元干预措施,以预防中风患者及其非正式照料者的慢性情绪困扰,称为“共同康复”(RT)。本研究的目的是测试招募的可行性、筛查和随机化方法的可接受性、RT的可接受性、对RT的满意度、所有时间点评估过程的可行性以及结果测量的可接受性。其次,我们旨在探索治疗期间的效应大小以及抑郁、焦虑和创伤后应激(PTS)等临床上显著症状的变化。更大的目标是在后续疗效试验之前加强方法的严谨性。
我们进行了一项可行性随机对照试验,以评估RT干预相对于神经科学重症监护病房(Neuro-ICU)收治的中风患者的最低限度强化常规护理(MEUC)的效果。如果二元组符合特定的纳入标准,则在住院1周内纳入。在基线时通过纸笔进行评估,在干预后(基线后约6周)通过REDCap以电子方式或通过电话进行评估,并在3个月后再次评估。评估包括人口统计学、复原力干预目标(正念、应对、自我效能和人际联系)以及情绪困扰(抑郁、焦虑和PTS)。主要结果是可行性和可接受性指标。次要结果是抑郁、焦虑、PTS、正念、应对、自我效能和人际联系。
我们同意了20个二元组,纳入了17个,保留了16个。尽管在我们能够接触到许多患者之前就错过了他们,但一旦研究人员进行了初步接触,很少有人拒绝参与或退出。招募的可行性(87%的符合条件二元组被纳入)、筛查的可接受性和随机化(随机化后所有RT二元组均被保留)都非常出色。项目满意度(RT测试后患者M = 11.33/12,照料者M = 12/12)以及对治疗课程的依从性(七个RT二元组中有六个参加了4/6节课程)都很高。没有影响干预实施的技术困难。缺失数据极少。对于患者和照料者而言,参与RT通常与从基线到测试后情绪困扰症状的临床显著改善相关。参与MEUC与情绪困扰的临床显著恶化相关。尽管RT组中情绪困扰症状的一些改善在测试后到3个月之间有所下降,但这些变化在临床上并不显著。RT还与符合临床显著症状标准的个体频率大幅下降相关,而MEUC则相反。有许多经验教训为当前和未来的研究提供了参考。
本研究提供了RT可行性的证据以及改善的信号,以及在未来的混合疗效-效果试验之前提高招募效率所需的方法学改变。
NCT02797509。