Cancer Patients’ Age-Related Benefits from Mobile Neurofeedback-Therapy in Quality of Life and Self-efficacy: A Clinical Waitlist Control Study
-
Published:2022-11-18
Issue:
Volume:
Page:
-
ISSN:1090-0586
-
Container-title:Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Appl Psychophysiol Biofeedback
Author:
Schmidt KiraORCID, Krawutschke Marvin, Kowalski Axel, Pasche Saskia, Bialek Anna, Schweig Theresa, Weismüller Benjamin, Tewes Mitra, Schuler Martin, Hamacher Rainer, Müller Bernhard W., Schadendorf Dirk, Skoda Eva-Maria, Teufel Martin, Fink Madeleine
Abstract
AbstractElectroencephalographic neurofeedback (EEG NF) can improve quality of life (QoL) and reduce distress by modifying the amplitude of selected brain frequencies. This study aims to investigate the effects of NF therapy on QoL and self-efficacy in cancer patients and to explore age-related reactions. In a waitlist control paradigm, psychometric data (EORTC QLQ-C30, General Self-Efficacy Scale) of 20 patients were collected at three different time points, each five weeks apart. An outpatient 10-session NF intervention (mobile) was conducted between the second and third measurement point. QoL and self-efficacy changed significantly over time (QoL: F(2,36) = 5.294, p < .05, η2 = .227; Self-efficacy: F(2,26) = 8.178, p < .05, η2 = .386). While QoL increased in younger patients, older patients initially showed a decrease in QoL, which then increased during intervention. Younger patients did not differ from older patients in QoL in both waitlist control (T0-T1) and intervention phase (T1–T2). QoL in older patients significantly differed between waitlist control and intervention phase (Z = − 2.023, p < .05, d = 1.085). Self-efficacy increased in both age categories. Younger and older patients did not differ in self-efficacy in waitlist control, but in intervention phase (F(1,16) = 7.014, p < .05, η2 = .319). The current findings suggest that NF therapy is a promising treatment modality for improving QoL in cancer patients. Our study reveals NF being a tool to influence self-efficacy, which should receive more appreciation in clinical care. However, the effect of NF in different age groups as well as the influence on further cancer-related symptoms should be investigated in future research.
Funder
Essen University Medicine Foundation Wiedenfeld-Stiftung Universitätsklinikum Essen
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Applied Psychology,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
Reference46 articles.
1. Aaronson, N. K., Ahmedzai, S., Bergman, B., Bullinger, M., Cull, A., Duez, N. J., et al. (1993). The European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer QLQ-C30: A quality-of-life instrument for use in international clinical trials in oncology. JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 85(5), 365–376. 2. Alghamedi, A., Buduhan, G., Tan, L., Srinathan, S. K., Sulman, J., Darling, G., & Kidane, B. (2018). Quality of life assessment in esophagectomy patients. Annals of Translational Medicine, 6(4), 84. 3. Alvarez, J., Meyer, F. L., Granoff, D. L., & Lundy, A. (2013). The effect of EEG biofeedback on reducing postcancer cognitive impairment. Integrative Cancer Therapies, 12(6), 475–487. 4. Arndt, V., Merx, H., Stürmer, T., Stegmaier, C., Ziegler, H., & Brenner, H. (2004). Age-specific detriments to quality of life among breast cancer patients one year after diagnosis. European Journal of Cancer, 40(5), 673–680. 5. Baik, S. H., Oswald, L. B., Buitrago, D., Buscemi, J., Iacobelli, F., Perez-Tamayo, A., et al. (2020). Cancer-relevant self-efficacy is related to better health-related quality of life and lower cancer-specific distress and symptom burden among Latina breast cancer survivors. International Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 27, 357–365.
Cited by
4 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|