Clara Maria I, Hegarty Josephine, Van Straten Annemieke, Giudetti Federica, Buekenhout Imke, Koc Irem, Canavarro Maria C, Allen Gomes Ana
Center for Research in Neuropsychology and Cognitive Behavioral Intervention (CINEICC), Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, University of Coimbra, Rua Do Colégio Novo, 3000-115, Coimbra, Portugal.
Laboratory of Chronopsychology and Cognitive Systems (ChronCog), University of Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal.
Support Care Cancer. 2025 May 24;33(6):495. doi: 10.1007/s00520-025-09552-0.
Insomnia is one of the most prevalent, persistent, and impairing conditions for which cancer survivors want treatment. However, the evidence-based first-line treatment, cognitive-behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I), is seldom available to cancer survivors. Digital CBT-I improves dissemination, but its impact depends on patients' acceptance and preferences. We aimed to determine the acceptability of and explore perspectives of digital CBT-I for cancer survivors.
Responses collected at study exit by 123 cancer survivors (mean age 47.1 years, 95.9% women, 76.4% breast cancer) who completed a digital CBT-I, OncoSleep, were analyzed using mixed methods. The exit survey included quantitative measures of acceptability, and qualitative insights were gathered through a free-response item. Responses were systematically coded and analyzed using deductive and inductive approaches to identify recurrent themes.
The digital CBT-I, OncoSleep, received high ratings for perceived efficacy, satisfaction, helpfulness, usability, likelihood of future use of therapeutic techniques, likelihood of recommendation, and user experience. Patients who showed clinically significant improvements in insomnia severity reported better user experience. Analyses revealed eight themes were relevant for engagement with treatment: clinician support and monitoring, interactive features and ease of use, perceived efficacy of treatment techniques, convenience and non-hospital setting, validation of unmet needs, sleep medication discontinuation, tailored treatment content, and empowerment.
Results suggest digital CBT-I is well-accepted among cancer survivors. Digital CBT-I offers opportunities for treatment engagement.
失眠是癌症幸存者希望得到治疗的最普遍、持续且有损害性的病症之一。然而,基于证据的一线治疗方法——失眠认知行为疗法(CBT-I),癌症幸存者很少能够获得。数字化CBT-I改善了其传播,但它的效果取决于患者的接受程度和偏好。我们旨在确定癌症幸存者对数字化CBT-I的可接受性并探究其观点。
对123名完成数字化CBT-I(OncoSleep)的癌症幸存者(平均年龄47.1岁,95.9%为女性,76.4%为乳腺癌患者)在研究结束时收集的回复进行了混合方法分析。结束调查包括可接受性的定量测量,并通过一个自由回答项目收集定性见解。使用演绎和归纳方法对回复进行系统编码和分析,以识别反复出现的主题。
数字化CBT-I(OncoSleep)在感知疗效、满意度、帮助性、可用性、未来使用治疗技术的可能性、推荐可能性和用户体验方面获得了高分。在失眠严重程度上有临床显著改善的患者报告了更好的用户体验。分析揭示了八个与参与治疗相关的主题:临床医生的支持和监测、交互功能和易用性、治疗技术的感知疗效、便利性和非医院环境、未满足需求的验证、停用助眠药物、量身定制的治疗内容以及增强权能。
结果表明数字化CBT-I在癌症幸存者中广受接受。数字化CBT-I为治疗参与提供了机会。