Department of Hematology/Oncology, Maroone Cancer Center, Cleveland Clinic - Florida, 2950 Cleveland Clinic Blvd, Weston, FL, 33331, USA.
Department of Radiation Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute/ Brigham and Women's Hospital, 75 Francis St, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.
BMC Cancer. 2020 Sep 22;20(1):899. doi: 10.1186/s12885-020-07380-5.
Art therapy may improve the physical, mental, and emotional wellbeing of individuals for a variety of purposes. It remains understudied and underutilized in cancer care. We sought to determine the ability of a pilot art therapy program to improve the physical, mental, and emotional well-being of cancer patients.
Chemotherapy-recipients, age 18 years and older, diagnosed with any type or stage of cancer, were considered eligible to participate in this single arm, pilot study, using four visual analog scales (VAS) with visually-similar, 0-10 scale (10 being worst) thermometers assessing: 1) pain, 2) emotional distress, 3) depression, and 4) anxiety. Participants were asked to complete all 4 metrics, pre-treatment, post-treatment, and at 48-72 h follow-up, after an hour-long art therapy session. Primary endpoints included post-intervention changes from baseline in the 4 VAS metrics.
Through a reasonable pilot sample (n = 50), 44% had breast cancer, 22% gastrointestinal cancers, 18% hematological malignancies, and 20% had other malignancies. A decrease in all VAS measures was noted immediately post-treatment but remained low only for pain and depression, not for emotional distress and anxiety upon follow up. There was a significant difference between the depression VAS scores of Hispanics (32%) compared to non-Hispanics (56%) (p = 0.009) at baseline. However, compared to non-Hispanics, Hispanics exhibited higher levels of depression after art therapy (P = 0.03) and during the follow-up intervals (p = 0.047).
Art therapy improved the emotional distress, depression, anxiety and pain among all cancer patients, at all time points. While depression scores were higher pre-intervention for Hispanic patients, Hispanic patients were noted to derive a greater improvement in depression scores from art therapy over time, compared to non-Hispanics patients. Discovering simple, effective, therapeutic interventions, to aid in distress relief in cancer patients, is important for ensuring clinical efficacy of treatment and improved quality of life.
艺术治疗可能会改善各种目的的个人的身体、心理和情感健康。它在癌症护理中的研究和应用都不足。我们旨在确定一个试点艺术治疗计划改善癌症患者身体、心理和情感健康的能力。
年龄在 18 岁及以上,被诊断患有任何类型或阶段的癌症的化疗患者,有资格参加这项单臂试点研究,使用四个视觉模拟量表(VAS),每个量表都有视觉相似的 0-10 刻度(10 为最严重)温度计来评估:1)疼痛,2)情绪困扰,3)抑郁,4)焦虑。参与者被要求在一个小时的艺术治疗课程后,在治疗前、治疗后和 48-72 小时随访时完成所有 4 个指标。主要终点包括从基线到 4 个 VAS 指标的干预后变化。
通过合理的试点样本(n=50),44%的患者患有乳腺癌,22%的患者患有胃肠道癌症,18%的患者患有血液恶性肿瘤,20%的患者患有其他恶性肿瘤。治疗后所有 VAS 测量值均有所下降,但仅在疼痛和抑郁方面持续较低,在情绪困扰和焦虑方面则不然。在基线时,西班牙裔(32%)与非西班牙裔(56%)之间的抑郁 VAS 评分存在显著差异(p=0.009)。然而,与非西班牙裔相比,西班牙裔在艺术治疗后(P=0.03)和随访期间(p=0.047)表现出更高水平的抑郁。
艺术治疗改善了所有癌症患者的情绪困扰、抑郁、焦虑和疼痛,在所有时间点都如此。虽然西班牙裔患者的抑郁评分在干预前较高,但与非西班牙裔患者相比,西班牙裔患者在接受艺术治疗后,其抑郁评分的改善更为明显。发现简单、有效的治疗干预措施,以帮助癌症患者缓解痛苦,对于确保治疗的临床疗效和提高生活质量非常重要。