Targeting emotional regulation using an Internet‐delivered psychological intervention for cancer survivors: A randomized controlled trial

Author:

Smith Isabelle S.1ORCID,Bind Marie‐Abèle2ORCID,Weihs Karen L.34ORCID,Bei Bei1ORCID,Wiley Joshua F.15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychological Sciences and Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health Monash University Melbourne Victoria Australia

2. Biostatistics Center Massachusetts General Hospital Boston Massachusetts USA

3. Department of Psychiatry, College of Medicine University of Arizona Tucson Arizona USA

4. University of Arizona Cancer Center Tucson Arizona USA

5. Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre Melbourne Victoria Australia

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesThis trial assessed the efficacy of an emotion‐focused, modular, Internet‐delivered adaptation of the Unified Protocol (UP) in improving cancer survivors' emotion regulation strategies.DesignA two‐arm randomized controlled trial (1:1) was used to compare the efficacy of two Internet‐based interventions: UP‐adapted CanCope Mind (CM) and lifestyle‐focused active control CanCope Lifestyle (CL).MethodsN = 224 cancer survivors randomized to CM or CL were assessed at baseline, between‐modules, at post‐intervention and 3‐month follow‐up on emotion regulation outcomes targeted by each CM module (Module 1: beliefs about emotions; Module 2: mindfulness; Module 3: cognitive reappraisal skills, catastrophizing, refocus on planning; Module 4: experiential avoidance). Primary analyses were intention‐to‐treat linear regressions using Fisher randomization tests for p‐values and intervals were used to compare groups with standardized mean difference (SMD) effect sizes.ResultsCanCope Mind participants (n = 61 completers) experienced moderate‐to‐large improvements (SMDs from .44–.88) across all outcomes at post‐intervention. CM's effects were larger than CL's (n = 75 completers) immediately post‐intervention and at 3‐month follow‐up for beliefs about emotions, mindfulness, cognitive reappraisals and experiential avoidance (all p's < .05). CM experienced greater improvements in catastrophizing immediately post‐intervention, with a trending effect at follow‐up. However, we could not reject the null hypothesis of identical between‐group effects for refocusing on planning both immediately post‐intervention and at follow‐up. Exploratory analyses revealed inconsistent between‐module effects.ConclusionsIn its entirety, CM is a promising intervention for improving and maintaining cancer survivors' adaptive emotion regulation, especially for mindfulness and experiential avoidance. This may have important clinical implications for promoting cancer survivors’ emotional functioning and general well‐being.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Applied Psychology,General Medicine

Reference78 articles.

1. The relevance of experiential avoidance in breast cancer distress: insights from a psychological group intervention

2. Emotion-regulation strategies across psychopathology: A meta-analytic review

3. Australian Institute of Health and Wellness. (2021).Cancer data in Australia.https://www.aihw.gov.au/reports/cancer/cancer‐data‐in‐australia/contents/summary

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