A systematic review with evidence mapping of supportive care interventions for melanoma patients and caregivers

Author:

Thompson Jake R.12ORCID,Salam Rehana A.2ORCID,Hanna Sarah3ORCID,Dieng Mbathio4ORCID,Saw Robyn P. M.256ORCID,Bartula Iris12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Medicine and Health The University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

2. Melanoma Institute Australia The University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

3. Department of Dermatology Royal Prince Alfred Hospital Camperdown New South Wales Australia

4. National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Clinical Trials Centre The University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

5. Department of Melanoma and Surgical Oncology Royal Prince Alfred Hospital Camperdown New South Wales Australia

6. Sydney Medical School The University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractAimWe conducted a systematic review and evidence gap mapping to explore the existing supportive care interventions and their impact on well‐being outcomes for melanoma patients and caregivers.MethodsWe searched MEDLINE, Embase, Web of Science Index Medicus, CINAHL, Lilacs, CENTRAL (Cochrane Library) and PsycINFO in December 2022, including interventional studies assessing the effectiveness of any supportive care intervention among melanoma patients and/or their caregivers.FindingsTwenty studies were included in this review. These studies consisted of randomised controlled trials (n = 11, 55%), pre‐post studies (n = 7, 35%) and quasi‐experimental trials (n = 2, 10%). All studies originated from high‐income countries and focused primarily on melanoma patients, with no studies identified that focused solely on caregivers. Educational interventions were the most common (n = 7, 35%), followed by psychoeducational interventions (n = 6, 30%) and psychotherapeutic interventions (n = 4, 20%). Nearly all included studies (n = 18, 90%) reported a positive effect of the intervention on the primary outcome of interest; however, most studies (n = 17, 85%) were judged to be at moderate or high risk of bias. Due to heterogeneity of study designs, intervention characteristics and outcome measures, meta‐analysis was not conducted.ImplicationsSupportive care interventions have positive impacts on melanoma patient well‐being outcomes, while being acceptable and feasible to conduct. More research is needed regarding supportive care interventions for melanoma caregivers. Future research should focus on eliminating sources of bias through rigorous methodology, with the development of standardised outcome measures for psychosocial outcomes to facilitate future meta‐analyses.

Funder

Melanoma Institute Australia

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cancer Research,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Oncology

Reference79 articles.

1. European consensus-based interdisciplinary guideline for melanoma. Part 2: Treatment - Update 2022

2. Global Coalition for Melanoma Patient Advocacy EuroMelanoma.Melanoma Skin Cancer Report: Stemming the Global Epidemic.2020Accessed January 2 2023.https://melanomapatients.org.au

3. American Cancer Society.Survival Rates for Melanoma Skin Cancer. Accessed December 12 2022.https://cancer.org/cancer/melanoma‐skin‐cancer

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