Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, College of Medicine, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston.
Department of Public Health Sciences, College of Medicine, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston.
JAMA Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2023 Jan 1;149(1):54-62. doi: 10.1001/jamaoto.2022.3700.
Although 1 in 4 head and neck cancer (HNC) survivors experience clinically significant body image distress (BID), a psychosocial morbidity that adversely affects quality of life, effective interventions for these patients are lacking.
To evaluate the acceptability and preliminary efficacy of BRIGHT (Building a Renewed ImaGe after Head and neck cancer Treatment), a brief tele-cognitive behavioral therapy, at reducing BID among HNC survivors.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This parallel-group pilot randomized clinical trial recruited adult HNC survivors with BID between August 13, 2020, and December 9, 2021, from the Medical University of South Carolina HNC clinic during a routine survivorship encounter. Data were analyzed from May 3 to June 16, 2022.
BRIGHT consisted of 5 weekly psychologist-led video tele-cognitive behavioral therapy sessions. Attention control (AC) consisted of dose- and delivery-matched survivorship education.
Change in HNC-related BID was assessed using IMAGE-HN (Inventory to Measure and Assess imaGe disturbancE-Head and Neck), a validated patient-reported outcome (score range, 0-84, with higher scores indicating greater HNC-related BID). Clinical response rate was measured as the proportion of patients with a clinically meaningful change in IMAGE-HN scores.
Of the 44 HNC survivors with BID allocated to BRIGHT (n = 20) or AC (n = 24), the median (range) age was 63 (41-80) years, and 27 patients (61%) were female. Patients rated BRIGHT's acceptability highly (all metrics had a mean rating of ≥4.5/5), and 19 of 20 patients (95%) receiving BRIGHT were likely or highly likely to recommend it to other HNC survivors with BID. BRIGHT decreased HNC-related BID from baseline to 1 month postintervention relative to AC (mean model-based difference in change in IMAGE-HN score, -7.9 points; 90% CI, -15.9 to 0.0 points) and from baseline to 3 months postintervention relative to AC (mean model-based difference in change in IMAGE-HN score, -17.1 points; 90% CI, -25.6 to -8.6 points). At 3 months postintervention, the clinical response rate of BRIGHT was 6.6-fold higher than AC (model-based odds ratio, 6.6; 90% CI, 2.0-21.8). The improvement in HNC-related BID for BRIGHT vs AC at 3 months was clinically significant, and the effect size was large (Cohen d, -0.9; 90% CI, -1.4 to -0.4).
In this pilot randomized clinical trial, BRIGHT was acceptable, may result in a clinically meaningful improvement in HNC-related BID, and showed a high clinical response rate. These promising preliminary data support conducting a large efficacy trial to establish BRIGHT as the first evidence-based treatment for HNC survivors with BID.
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03831100.
尽管有四分之一的头颈部癌症(HNC)幸存者经历了明显的身体意象困扰(BID),这是一种对生活质量产生不利影响的心理社会发病率,但这些患者缺乏有效的干预措施。
评估 BRIGHT(头颈部癌症治疗后的重建图像)的可接受性和初步疗效,BRIGHT 是一种简短的远程认知行为疗法,用于减少 HNC 幸存者的 BID。
设计、设置和参与者:这项平行组随机临床试验招募了 2020 年 8 月 13 日至 2021 年 12 月 9 日期间在南卡罗来纳医科大学 HNC 诊所进行常规生存随访时患有 BID 的成年 HNC 幸存者,数据于 2022 年 5 月 3 日至 6 月 16 日进行分析。
BRIGHT 包括每周由心理学家主导的 5 次视频远程认知行为疗法。对照组(AC)包括剂量和交付相匹配的生存教育。
使用 IMAGE-HN(评估头颈部癌症图像障碍的量表)评估 HNC 相关 BID 的变化,这是一种经过验证的患者报告的结果(评分范围为 0-84,分数越高表示 HNC 相关 BID 越严重)。临床反应率通过 IMAGE-HN 评分的临床显著变化来衡量。
在被分配到 BRIGHT(n=20)或 AC(n=24)的 44 名有 BID 的 HNC 幸存者中,中位(范围)年龄为 63(41-80)岁,27 名患者(61%)为女性。患者对 BRIGHT 的接受度评价很高(所有指标的平均评分为≥4.5/5),接受 BRIGHT 的 20 名患者中有 19 名(95%)可能或非常可能向其他有 BID 的 HNC 幸存者推荐 BRIGHT。与 AC 相比,BRIGHT 在干预后 1 个月时降低了 HNC 相关 BID(基于模型的 IMAGE-HN 评分变化的平均差值,-7.9 分;90%CI,-15.9 至 0.0 分),在干预后 3 个月时降低了 HNC 相关 BID(基于模型的 IMAGE-HN 评分变化的平均差值,-17.1 分;90%CI,-25.6 至-8.6 分)。在 3 个月时,BRIGHT 的临床反应率比 AC 高 6.6 倍(基于模型的优势比,6.6;90%CI,2.0-21.8)。与 AC 相比,BRIGHT 在 3 个月时改善 HNC 相关 BID 的效果具有临床意义,且效果显著(Cohen d,-0.9;90%CI,-1.4 至-0.4)。
在这项初步随机临床试验中,BRIGHT 是可以接受的,可能会导致 HNC 相关 BID 的临床显著改善,并显示出较高的临床反应率。这些有希望的初步数据支持开展一项大型疗效试验,以确立 BRIGHT 作为 HNC 幸存者 BID 的首个基于证据的治疗方法。
ClinicalTrials.gov 标识符:NCT03831100。