Psychological interventions prior to cancer surgery: A review of reviews
Psychological interventions prior to cancer surgery: A review of reviews
Purpose of Review
Patients with cancer who have high levels of psychological distress have poor treatment compliance and worse outcomes. This “review of reviews” provides a narrative synthesis of the impact of psychological prehabilitation interventions on individuals awaiting cancer surgery.
Recent Findings
Twenty reviews of prehabilitation with psychological interventions were identified. There is a trend towards improved psychological outcomes following intervention, particularly when psychologist-led. However, there was considerable heterogeneity within interventions, outcome measures, and timing of assessment precluding numeric synthesis. Methodological limitations including non-blinding, absence of stratification, and underpowered studies were also pervasive.
Summary
Providing psychological support early in the cancer pathway and prior to surgery has the potential to improve psychological health and outcomes. The application of existing knowledge in psycho-oncology, including distress screening, is needed in the prehabilitation setting. Consistent outcome assessments, accurate reporting of intervention components and delivery methods, and a consideration of effective systems and economical implementation strategies would facilitate advancements in this field.
78–87
Grimmett, Chloe
7f27e85b-2850-481d-a7dd-2835e1a925cd
Heneka, Nicole
cabbdf19-1eee-42d4-a30f-f7bda3c58be1
Chambers, Suzanne
44293295-c93a-4585-904b-aea90e2f53a6
1 March 2022
Grimmett, Chloe
7f27e85b-2850-481d-a7dd-2835e1a925cd
Heneka, Nicole
cabbdf19-1eee-42d4-a30f-f7bda3c58be1
Chambers, Suzanne
44293295-c93a-4585-904b-aea90e2f53a6
Grimmett, Chloe, Heneka, Nicole and Chambers, Suzanne
(2022)
Psychological interventions prior to cancer surgery: A review of reviews.
Current Anesthesiology, 12, .
(doi:10.1007/s40140-021-00505-x).
Abstract
Purpose of Review
Patients with cancer who have high levels of psychological distress have poor treatment compliance and worse outcomes. This “review of reviews” provides a narrative synthesis of the impact of psychological prehabilitation interventions on individuals awaiting cancer surgery.
Recent Findings
Twenty reviews of prehabilitation with psychological interventions were identified. There is a trend towards improved psychological outcomes following intervention, particularly when psychologist-led. However, there was considerable heterogeneity within interventions, outcome measures, and timing of assessment precluding numeric synthesis. Methodological limitations including non-blinding, absence of stratification, and underpowered studies were also pervasive.
Summary
Providing psychological support early in the cancer pathway and prior to surgery has the potential to improve psychological health and outcomes. The application of existing knowledge in psycho-oncology, including distress screening, is needed in the prehabilitation setting. Consistent outcome assessments, accurate reporting of intervention components and delivery methods, and a consideration of effective systems and economical implementation strategies would facilitate advancements in this field.
Text
Psychological Interventions prior to Cancer Surgery
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 10 November 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 31 January 2022
Published date: 1 March 2022
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 452732
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452732
ISSN: 1523-3855
PURE UUID: 0d2a5b6c-d409-4e4c-bf87-a77547d030aa
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Date deposited: 17 Dec 2021 17:34
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 06:58
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Contributors
Author:
Nicole Heneka
Author:
Suzanne Chambers
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