A systematic review of nonpharmacological interventions to reduce procedural anxiety among patients undergoing radiation therapy for cancer

Author:

Forbes Erin1ORCID,Baker Amanda L.1ORCID,Britton Ben2,Clover Kerrie13ORCID,Skelton Eliza1,Moore Lyndell14,Handley Tonelle1,Oultram Sharon5,Oldmeadow Christopher6ORCID,Gibberd Alison6ORCID,McCarter Kristen7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Medicine and Public Health, College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing University of Newcastle Callaghan Australia

2. Hunter New England Mental Health Services Newcastle Australia

3. Psycho‐Oncology Service, Department of Consultation Liaison Psychiatry Calvary Mater Newcastle Waratah Australia

4. Flinders Health and Medical Research Institute, College of Medicine and Public Health, Flinders University Bedford Park Australia

5. Department of Radiation Oncology Calvary Mater Newcastle Waratah Australia

6. Data Sciences, Hunter Medical Research Institute New Lambton Australia

7. School of Psychological Sciences, College of Engineering, Science and Environment University of Newcastle Callaghan Australia

Abstract

AbstractProcedural anxiety is a concern for a number of patients undergoing radiation therapy. While procedural anxiety is often treated pharmacologically, there is a clinical need for effective alternative strategies for patients who are contraindicated from medication use, and those who prefer not to take unnecessary medications.ObjectivesThe primary objective was to assess the efficacy of nonpharmacological interventions delivered to adults with cancer, in the radiation oncology department, just prior to, or during radiation therapy, in reducing levels of self‐reported procedural anxiety. The secondary objectives were to assess the efficacy of these interventions in reducing physiological symptoms of procedural anxiety and anxiety‐related treatment disruptions.DesignSystematic review.Data SourcesElectronic databases (MEDLINE, CINAHL, EMBASE, PsycINFO and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials) were searched from inception up until February 2022.Inclusion CriteriaPopulation: Adult patients with cancer undergoing external beam radiation therapy. Intervention: Nonpharmacological interventions delivered within the radiation therapy department. Comparison: standard care controls, or standard care plus an alternative intervention. Outcomes: level of self‐reported procedural anxiety (primary), physiological symptoms of anxiety (secondary) and measures of anxiety‐related treatment disruptions (secondary).Data Extraction and AnalysisTwo reviewers independently extracted data. A meta‐analysis was originally planned but deemed not feasible as the studies could not be confidently pooled for meta‐analysis, due to the variability in the interventions, study designs and the generally low number of studies. Therefore, a narrative synthesis is presented.ResultsScreening of 2363 records identified nine studies that met inclusion criteria: six studies of music interventions, two of video‐based patient education and one of aromatherapy. Overall, three studies received a global rating of strong methodological quality and low risk of bias. Three studies reported a significant effect of the intervention on reducing the primary outcome of self‐reported procedural anxiety: two music interventions (both strong methodological quality), and one video‐based patient education (moderate methodological quality). One of the studies (a music intervention) also reported a significant reduction in the secondary outcome of physiological symptoms of procedural anxiety (systolic blood pressure).ConclusionsThe evidence for nonpharmacological interventions delivered to adults with cancer just prior to, or during radiation therapy, in reducing levels of self‐reported procedural anxiety is limited, with very few well‐designed studies. There is a need for interventions for procedural anxiety during radiation therapy to be evaluated through rigorous randomised controlled trials.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cancer Research,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Oncology

Reference69 articles.

1. Australian Institue of Health and Welfare.Cancer in Australia 2021. Supplementary tables for Chapter 5: Number of new cancer cases.2021.

2. Estimating the demand for radiotherapy from the evidence: A review of changes from 2003 to 2012

3. Australian Institue of Health and Welfare.Cancer in Australia 2021. Supplementary tables for Chapter 6: Treatment.2021.

4. Cancer Australia.Radiation therapy: Australian Government.https://www.canceraustralia.gov.au/impacted‐by‐cancer/treatment/radiation‐therapy

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