Preventing adverse events of chemotherapy by educating patients about the nocebo effect (RENNO study) – study protocol of a randomized controlled trial with gastrointestinal cancer patients

Abstract Background Patients undergoing chemotherapy are highly burdened by side effects. These may be caused by the pharmacodynamics of the drug or be driven by psychological factors such as negative expectations or pre-conditioning, which reflect nocebo effects. As such, negative pre-treatment exp...

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Main Authors: Julia Quidde, Yiqi Pan, Melanie Salm, Armin Hendi, Sven Nilsson, Karin Oechsle, Alexander Stein, Yvonne Nestoriuc
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-09-01
Series:BMC Cancer
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12885-018-4814-7
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spelling doaj-5d73a3bd046f41a6b9af9e29d9bb92a12020-11-25T01:32:42ZengBMCBMC Cancer1471-24072018-09-011811810.1186/s12885-018-4814-7Preventing adverse events of chemotherapy by educating patients about the nocebo effect (RENNO study) – study protocol of a randomized controlled trial with gastrointestinal cancer patientsJulia Quidde0Yiqi Pan1Melanie Salm2Armin Hendi3Sven Nilsson4Karin Oechsle5Alexander Stein6Yvonne Nestoriuc7Department of Oncology, Haematology, Bone Marrow Transplantation with Section Pneumology, University Medical Center Hamburg-EppendorfDepartment of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, University Medical Center Hamburg-EppendorfClinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, University of HamburgDepartment of Oncology, Haematology, Bone Marrow Transplantation with Section Pneumology, University Medical Center Hamburg-EppendorfDepartment of Oncology, Haematology, Bone Marrow Transplantation with Section Pneumology, University Medical Center Hamburg-EppendorfDepartment of Oncology, Haematology, Bone Marrow Transplantation with Section Pneumology, University Medical Center Hamburg-EppendorfUniversity Cancer Center Hamburg, Hubertus Wald Tumorzentrum, University Hospital Hamburg-EppendorfDepartment of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, University Medical Center Hamburg-EppendorfAbstract Background Patients undergoing chemotherapy are highly burdened by side effects. These may be caused by the pharmacodynamics of the drug or be driven by psychological factors such as negative expectations or pre-conditioning, which reflect nocebo effects. As such, negative pre-treatment expectations or prior experiences might exacerbate the burden of chemotherapy side effects. Educating patients about this nocebo effect has been put forward as a potential strategy to optimize patients’ pre-treatment expectations. In this study, we evaluate whether a briefing about the nocebo effect is efficacious in reducing side effects. Methods In this exploratory study, a total number of n = 100 outpatients with newly diagnosed gastrointestinal cancers are randomized 1:1 to an information session about the nocebo effect (nocebo-education) or an attention control group (ACG) with matching interaction time. Assessments take place before the intervention (T1 pre), post-intervention (T1 post), and 10 days (T2) and 12 weeks (T3) after the initial chemotherapy. The primary outcomes are the patient-rated number and intensity of side effects at 10-days and at 12-weeks follow-up. Secondary outcomes include coping with side effects, tendency to misattribute symptoms, compliance intention, attitude towards the chemotherapy, co-medication to treat side effects and the clinician-rated severity of toxicity. Further analyses are conducted to investigate whether a potential beneficial effect is mediated by a change of expectations before and after the intervention. Discussion Informing patients about the nocebo effect might be an innovative and feasible intervention to reduce the burden of side effects and strengthen patients’ perceived control over adverse symptoms. Trial registration The trial is registered at the German Clinical Trials Register (ID: DRKS00009501; retrospectively registered on March 27, 2018). The first patient was enrolled on September 29, 2015.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12885-018-4814-7Side effectsChemotherapyGastrointestinal cancerTreatment expectationsNocebo effectInformed consent
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Julia Quidde
Yiqi Pan
Melanie Salm
Armin Hendi
Sven Nilsson
Karin Oechsle
Alexander Stein
Yvonne Nestoriuc
spellingShingle Julia Quidde
Yiqi Pan
Melanie Salm
Armin Hendi
Sven Nilsson
Karin Oechsle
Alexander Stein
Yvonne Nestoriuc
Preventing adverse events of chemotherapy by educating patients about the nocebo effect (RENNO study) – study protocol of a randomized controlled trial with gastrointestinal cancer patients
BMC Cancer
Side effects
Chemotherapy
Gastrointestinal cancer
Treatment expectations
Nocebo effect
Informed consent
author_facet Julia Quidde
Yiqi Pan
Melanie Salm
Armin Hendi
Sven Nilsson
Karin Oechsle
Alexander Stein
Yvonne Nestoriuc
author_sort Julia Quidde
title Preventing adverse events of chemotherapy by educating patients about the nocebo effect (RENNO study) – study protocol of a randomized controlled trial with gastrointestinal cancer patients
title_short Preventing adverse events of chemotherapy by educating patients about the nocebo effect (RENNO study) – study protocol of a randomized controlled trial with gastrointestinal cancer patients
title_full Preventing adverse events of chemotherapy by educating patients about the nocebo effect (RENNO study) – study protocol of a randomized controlled trial with gastrointestinal cancer patients
title_fullStr Preventing adverse events of chemotherapy by educating patients about the nocebo effect (RENNO study) – study protocol of a randomized controlled trial with gastrointestinal cancer patients
title_full_unstemmed Preventing adverse events of chemotherapy by educating patients about the nocebo effect (RENNO study) – study protocol of a randomized controlled trial with gastrointestinal cancer patients
title_sort preventing adverse events of chemotherapy by educating patients about the nocebo effect (renno study) – study protocol of a randomized controlled trial with gastrointestinal cancer patients
publisher BMC
series BMC Cancer
issn 1471-2407
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Abstract Background Patients undergoing chemotherapy are highly burdened by side effects. These may be caused by the pharmacodynamics of the drug or be driven by psychological factors such as negative expectations or pre-conditioning, which reflect nocebo effects. As such, negative pre-treatment expectations or prior experiences might exacerbate the burden of chemotherapy side effects. Educating patients about this nocebo effect has been put forward as a potential strategy to optimize patients’ pre-treatment expectations. In this study, we evaluate whether a briefing about the nocebo effect is efficacious in reducing side effects. Methods In this exploratory study, a total number of n = 100 outpatients with newly diagnosed gastrointestinal cancers are randomized 1:1 to an information session about the nocebo effect (nocebo-education) or an attention control group (ACG) with matching interaction time. Assessments take place before the intervention (T1 pre), post-intervention (T1 post), and 10 days (T2) and 12 weeks (T3) after the initial chemotherapy. The primary outcomes are the patient-rated number and intensity of side effects at 10-days and at 12-weeks follow-up. Secondary outcomes include coping with side effects, tendency to misattribute symptoms, compliance intention, attitude towards the chemotherapy, co-medication to treat side effects and the clinician-rated severity of toxicity. Further analyses are conducted to investigate whether a potential beneficial effect is mediated by a change of expectations before and after the intervention. Discussion Informing patients about the nocebo effect might be an innovative and feasible intervention to reduce the burden of side effects and strengthen patients’ perceived control over adverse symptoms. Trial registration The trial is registered at the German Clinical Trials Register (ID: DRKS00009501; retrospectively registered on March 27, 2018). The first patient was enrolled on September 29, 2015.
topic Side effects
Chemotherapy
Gastrointestinal cancer
Treatment expectations
Nocebo effect
Informed consent
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12885-018-4814-7
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