Randomized control trial of advanced cancer patients at a private hospital in Kenya and the impact of dignity therapy on quality of life

Abstract Background Palliative care is a modality of treatment that addresses physical, psychological and spiritual symptoms. Dignity therapy, a form of psychotherapy, was developed by Professor Harvey Chochinov, MD in 2005.The aim of the study was to assess the effect of one session of dignity ther...

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Main Authors: John Weru, Miriam Gatehi, Alice Musibi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-07-01
Series:BMC Palliative Care
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12904-020-00614-0
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spelling doaj-e7a4c05bd99a49a289c77a97a91959832020-11-25T02:47:48ZengBMCBMC Palliative Care1472-684X2020-07-0119111210.1186/s12904-020-00614-0Randomized control trial of advanced cancer patients at a private hospital in Kenya and the impact of dignity therapy on quality of lifeJohn Weru0Miriam Gatehi1Alice Musibi2Palliative care, AKUHNMMED INT. MedOncology, Kenyatta National HospitalAbstract Background Palliative care is a modality of treatment that addresses physical, psychological and spiritual symptoms. Dignity therapy, a form of psychotherapy, was developed by Professor Harvey Chochinov, MD in 2005.The aim of the study was to assess the effect of one session of dignity therapy on quality of life in advanced cancer patients. Methods This was a randomized control trial of 144 patients (72 in each arm) randomized into group 1 (intervention arm) and group 2 (control arm). Baseline ESAS scores were determined in both arms following which group 1 received Dignity therapy while Group 2 received usual care only. Data collected was presented as printed (Legacy) documents to group 1 participants. These documents were a summary of previous discussions held. Post intervention ESAS scores were obtained in both groups after 6 weeks. Analysis was based on the intention to treat principle and descriptive statistics computed. The main outcome was symptom distress scores on the ESAS (summated out of 100 and symptom specific scores out of 10). The student T-test was used to test for difference in ESAS scores at follow up and graphs were computed for common cancers and comorbidities. Results Of the 144 (72 patients in each arm) patients randomized, 70%were female while 30% were male with a mean age of 50 years. At 6 weeks, 11 patients were lost to follow up, seven died and 126 completed the study. The commonly encountered cancers were gastrointestinal cancers (43%, p = 0.29), breast cancer (27.27% p = 0.71) and gynaecologic cancers (23% p = 0.35). Majority of the patients i.e. 64.3% had no comorbidities. The primary analysis results showed higher scores for the DT group (change in mean = 1.57) compared to the UC group (change in mean = − 0.74) yielding a non-statistically significant difference in change scores of 1.44 (p = 0.670; 95% CI − 5.20 to 8.06). After adjusting for baseline scores, the mean (summated) symptom distress score was not significant (GLM p = 0.78). Dignity therapy group showed a trend towards statistical improvement in anxiety (p = 0.059). The largest effects seen were in improvement of appetite, lower anxiety and improved wellbeing (Cohen effect size 0.3, 0.5 and 0.31 respectively). Conclusion Dignity therapy showed no statistical improvement in overall quality of life. Symptom improvement was seen in anxiety and this was a trend towards statistical significance (p = 0.059). Trial registration Trial registration number PACTR201604001447244 retrospectively registered with Pan African Clinical trials on 28th January 2016.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12904-020-00614-0Dignity therapyPalliative careQuality of lifeAdvanced cancer patientsEdmonton symptoms and assessment scale
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John Weru
Miriam Gatehi
Alice Musibi
spellingShingle John Weru
Miriam Gatehi
Alice Musibi
Randomized control trial of advanced cancer patients at a private hospital in Kenya and the impact of dignity therapy on quality of life
BMC Palliative Care
Dignity therapy
Palliative care
Quality of life
Advanced cancer patients
Edmonton symptoms and assessment scale
author_facet John Weru
Miriam Gatehi
Alice Musibi
author_sort John Weru
title Randomized control trial of advanced cancer patients at a private hospital in Kenya and the impact of dignity therapy on quality of life
title_short Randomized control trial of advanced cancer patients at a private hospital in Kenya and the impact of dignity therapy on quality of life
title_full Randomized control trial of advanced cancer patients at a private hospital in Kenya and the impact of dignity therapy on quality of life
title_fullStr Randomized control trial of advanced cancer patients at a private hospital in Kenya and the impact of dignity therapy on quality of life
title_full_unstemmed Randomized control trial of advanced cancer patients at a private hospital in Kenya and the impact of dignity therapy on quality of life
title_sort randomized control trial of advanced cancer patients at a private hospital in kenya and the impact of dignity therapy on quality of life
publisher BMC
series BMC Palliative Care
issn 1472-684X
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract Background Palliative care is a modality of treatment that addresses physical, psychological and spiritual symptoms. Dignity therapy, a form of psychotherapy, was developed by Professor Harvey Chochinov, MD in 2005.The aim of the study was to assess the effect of one session of dignity therapy on quality of life in advanced cancer patients. Methods This was a randomized control trial of 144 patients (72 in each arm) randomized into group 1 (intervention arm) and group 2 (control arm). Baseline ESAS scores were determined in both arms following which group 1 received Dignity therapy while Group 2 received usual care only. Data collected was presented as printed (Legacy) documents to group 1 participants. These documents were a summary of previous discussions held. Post intervention ESAS scores were obtained in both groups after 6 weeks. Analysis was based on the intention to treat principle and descriptive statistics computed. The main outcome was symptom distress scores on the ESAS (summated out of 100 and symptom specific scores out of 10). The student T-test was used to test for difference in ESAS scores at follow up and graphs were computed for common cancers and comorbidities. Results Of the 144 (72 patients in each arm) patients randomized, 70%were female while 30% were male with a mean age of 50 years. At 6 weeks, 11 patients were lost to follow up, seven died and 126 completed the study. The commonly encountered cancers were gastrointestinal cancers (43%, p = 0.29), breast cancer (27.27% p = 0.71) and gynaecologic cancers (23% p = 0.35). Majority of the patients i.e. 64.3% had no comorbidities. The primary analysis results showed higher scores for the DT group (change in mean = 1.57) compared to the UC group (change in mean = − 0.74) yielding a non-statistically significant difference in change scores of 1.44 (p = 0.670; 95% CI − 5.20 to 8.06). After adjusting for baseline scores, the mean (summated) symptom distress score was not significant (GLM p = 0.78). Dignity therapy group showed a trend towards statistical improvement in anxiety (p = 0.059). The largest effects seen were in improvement of appetite, lower anxiety and improved wellbeing (Cohen effect size 0.3, 0.5 and 0.31 respectively). Conclusion Dignity therapy showed no statistical improvement in overall quality of life. Symptom improvement was seen in anxiety and this was a trend towards statistical significance (p = 0.059). Trial registration Trial registration number PACTR201604001447244 retrospectively registered with Pan African Clinical trials on 28th January 2016.
topic Dignity therapy
Palliative care
Quality of life
Advanced cancer patients
Edmonton symptoms and assessment scale
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12904-020-00614-0
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