Horn Nicole, Gärtner Laura, Rastan Ardawan J, Andrási Térezia B, Lenz Juliane, Böning Andreas, Salzmann-Djufri Miriam, Puvogel Ulrike, Genovese Maria, Kus Sibel, Rief Winfried, Salzmann Stefan
Division of Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, Philipps University of Marburg, Marburg, Germany.
Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Heart Center, Philipps University of Marburg, Marburg, Germany.
Front Cardiovasc Med. 2023 Mar 2;10:1105507. doi: 10.3389/fcvm.2023.1105507. eCollection 2023.
Complete recovery after surgery depends on psychological factors such as preoperative information, expectations, and surgery-associated anxiety. Prior studies have shown that even a short preoperative psychological intervention aiming at optimized expectations (EXPECT) can improve postoperative outcomes in coronary artery bypass patients. However, this intervention may benefit only a small subgroup of heart surgery patients since implementing preoperative psychological interventions into the daily clinical routine is difficult due to the additional time and appointments. It is unclear whether the EXPECT intervention can be shortened and whether heart valve patients would also benefit from interventions that optimize patients' expectations. The multicenter ValvEx trial aims (i) to adapt an effective preoperative psychological intervention (EXPECT) to make it brief enough to be easily integrated into the preoperative routine of heart valve patients and (ii) to examine if the adapted preoperative psychological intervention improves the subjectively perceived illness-related disability (PDI) up to 3 months after surgery.
In two German university hospitals, = 88 heart valve patients who undergo heart surgery are randomized into two groups [standard of care (SOC) vs. standard of care plus interventional expectation manipulation (SOC and EXPECT)] after baseline assessment. Patients in the EXPECT group additionally to standard of care participate in the preoperative psychological intervention (30-40 min), focusing on optimizing expectations and have two booster-telephone calls (4 and 8 weeks after the surgery, approx. 15 min). Both groups have assessments again on the evening before the surgery, 4 to 6 days, and 3 months after the surgery.
The trial demonstrates excellent feasibility in the clinical routine and a high interest by the patients.
The Ethics Committees of the Department of Medicine of the Philipps University of Marburg and the Department of Medicine of the University of Giessen approved the study protocol. Study results will be published in peer-reviewed journals and presented at congresses.
ClinicalTrials.gov, identifier NCT04502121.
手术后的完全康复取决于心理因素,如术前信息、期望和手术相关焦虑。先前的研究表明,即使是旨在优化期望的短期术前心理干预(EXPECT)也可以改善冠状动脉搭桥患者的术后结果。然而,这种干预可能仅使一小部分心脏手术患者受益,因为将术前心理干预纳入日常临床常规很困难,因为需要额外的时间和预约。目前尚不清楚EXPECT干预是否可以缩短,以及心脏瓣膜病患者是否也能从优化患者期望的干预中受益。多中心ValvEx试验旨在:(i)调整有效的术前心理干预(EXPECT),使其简短到足以轻松融入心脏瓣膜病患者的术前常规;(ii)检查调整后的术前心理干预是否能改善术后3个月内主观感受到的疾病相关残疾(PDI)。
在德国的两家大学医院,88名接受心脏手术的心脏瓣膜病患者在基线评估后被随机分为两组[常规护理(SOC)组与常规护理加干预性期望操纵(SOC和EXPECT)组]。EXPECT组的患者除了接受常规护理外,还参与术前心理干预(30 - 40分钟),重点是优化期望,并在术后4周和8周进行两次强化电话随访(每次约15分钟)。两组在手术前一晚、术后4至6天以及术后3个月再次进行评估。
该试验在临床常规中显示出极佳的可行性,且患者兴趣浓厚。
马尔堡菲利普斯大学医学部和吉森大学医学部的伦理委员会批准了研究方案。研究结果将发表在同行评审期刊上,并在大会上展示。
ClinicalTrials.gov,标识符NCT04502121。